Massachusetts nano-tech company moves to LI

Graphene Labs worker Credit: Graphene Labs
This time, Long Island isn't losing a high-tech company — it's gaining one.
Stony Brook University's business incubator in Calverton this week welcomes Graphene Laboratories, a Massachusetts company that specializes in building nano-scale electronics using graphene — a form of carbon. The company operates a second, commercial website, Graphene Supermarket, offering some of its products.
Graphene, prized for its high conductivity, is used in atomic-scale layers to build circuits and other electronic devices.
Graphene arrives on Long Island as a result of its business cooperation with a primary partner, CVD Equipment Corp., of Ronkonkoma.
Graphene, founded in Massachusetts — where its chief executive Elena Polyakova this year was named a 2011 MassHighTech Woman to Watch — has been using CVD's facilities as a way station, awaiting its move into the Calverton incubator.
Polyakova, a Russian immigrant, has a master's degree from the Moscow Institute of Physics, and a doctorate in chemistry from the University of Southern California. She is a former fellow at Columbia University's Flynn Group, in the chemistry department and the Columbia radiation laboratory.
Among the Supermarket's products (for descriptions, go to graphene-supermarket.com) are Kish Graphite, Graphene Wafers: CVDgraphene, Graphene Nanopowder, Graphene Oxide, Graphene TEM grids, Wafers, accessories, Graphene Value Kits, Graphene Solutions.
The Calverton Business Incubator, owned and operated by Stony Brook University, “focuses on nurturing the development of new agriculture, aquaculture, and environmental technologies,“ the university says on the incubator website.
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