Graphene revolutionary speaker headphone research – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

Graphene may be the next revolution in headphones

Jacob Kastrenakes
is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade.

Since developing ways to acquire graphene — a one-atom thick sheet of carbon — in significant quantities, research around the material has become the next big thing, and scientists at Berkeley have now detailed a new application for the material: earphones. “Graphene is an ideal building material for small, efficient, high-quality broad-band audio speakers,” researchers Qin Zhou and A. Zettl write in their report. The team compares graphene to Sennheiser’s MX-400 earbuds, and notes that the material performs comparably even without a specialized design.

Graphene excels as a speaker because its small mass allows the air around it to mitigate its movement — it doesn’t require the expensive and energy inefficient damping that traditional speakers need. The size and frequency range of graphene makes the material ideal for small, earbud-like speakers. But the team also notes that the setup could work as a microphone with “outstanding response characteristics.” The development of graphene as a sound-emitting device was first published by a different team last year, but this is the first application of that principle.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.