20 November 2013
Last updated at 13:49 ET
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has awarded scientists
$100,000 (£60,000) to create stronger, thinner condoms from the new
"wonder material".
The substance will be mixed with latex to produce a material which will encourage use by "enhancing sensation".
Graphene, the thinnest, strongest material known, was first isolated at the University of Manchester in 2004.
It has more often been linked to potentially revolutionising products such as smartphones and broadband.
Its discovery won Manchester-based scientists Sir Andre Geim and Sir Kostya Novoselov the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2010.
First 'everyday use'
Bill Gates condom challenge 'to be met' by graphene scientists
Safer condoms will be one of the first products developed at the new National Graphene Institute in Manchester.
The substance will be mixed with latex to produce a material which will encourage use by "enhancing sensation".
Graphene, the thinnest, strongest material known, was first isolated at the University of Manchester in 2004.
It has more often been linked to potentially revolutionising products such as smartphones and broadband.
Its discovery won Manchester-based scientists Sir Andre Geim and Sir Kostya Novoselov the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2010.
First 'everyday use'
The charity has offered the Grand Challenges Explorations
grant to the Manchester research team to develop new composite materials
for condoms, which it wants to make more desirable in order to increase
global usage.
Dr Papa Salif Sow, senior program officer on the HIV team at the foundation, said a "redesigned condom that overcomes inconvenience, fumbling or perceived loss of pleasure would be a powerful weapon in the fight against poverty".
Dr Aravind Vijayaraghavan, who will lead the researchers, said that since it was isolated, "people have wondered when graphene will be used in our daily life".
"Currently, people imagine using graphene in mobile phone screens, food packaging and chemical sensors.
"If this project is successful, we might have [an everyday] use which will literally touch our everyday life in the most intimate way."
The National Graphene Institute at the University of Manchester is being established with a £23m grant from the European Regional Development Fund.
The five-floor building is set to open in 2015, creating 100 jobs.
Dr Papa Salif Sow, senior program officer on the HIV team at the foundation, said a "redesigned condom that overcomes inconvenience, fumbling or perceived loss of pleasure would be a powerful weapon in the fight against poverty".
Dr Aravind Vijayaraghavan, who will lead the researchers, said that since it was isolated, "people have wondered when graphene will be used in our daily life".
"Currently, people imagine using graphene in mobile phone screens, food packaging and chemical sensors.
"If this project is successful, we might have [an everyday] use which will literally touch our everyday life in the most intimate way."
The National Graphene Institute at the University of Manchester is being established with a £23m grant from the European Regional Development Fund.
The five-floor building is set to open in 2015, creating 100 jobs.
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