Perforene


In March 2013, Lockheed Martin announced that it was developing a family of membranes made from graphene, under the trademark Perforene.
The most promising application is seawater desalination. With holes as small as one nanometer in diameter, the membranes would trap sodium, chlorine and other ions, while allowing water molecules to pass through easily.Performance expectations include:
  • Up to 5x increase in flux across the membrane
  • Fouling reduction of up to 80%
  • Approximately 100x less energy and pressure required.
In addition to the desalination industry, Lockheed Martin plans to market Perforene variants in the following fields:
The product was not expected to be released until 2020.

Media reaction

Bruce Sterling commented for Wired, "if this graphene vaporware actually worked out in practice, we’d have to forgive Lockheed Martin for everything else they’ve ever done — plus maybe even give them Nobels and McMansion palaces in former deserts."
The Water Desalination Report evaluated Lockheed Martin's claims that it had developed a membrane that will desalinate water “at a fraction of the cost of industry-standard RO systems” as "ridiculous and very premature."