![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgowPQYr4869fVmuxdzoXxaSRkT6xvsgYKxCearEDbfcKaOd1GUdIDcMV9u8k4flH_cSUjpu1A96nMKpo0VkqGaqQOOXtXPFvTEJGEKaXLtvFdAmve_cS6TXrreGw1cxlejdCUUjzWU4qm1hxo/s280/sibocook.jpg)
The Rice lab's work on Girl Scout Cookies began when lab chemist James Tour mentioned at a meeting that his team had turned table sugar to graphene - a one-atom-thick layer of carbon possessing remarkable properties of strength and conductivity. He claimed that he and his grad students could grow graphene from any carbon source, and it just so happened there were Girl Scout Cookies being passed around the meeting.
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