Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Outdoors
  4. News

The world’s first graphene running shoes are coming in 2018

Add as a preferred source on Google

Graphene is a relatively new material that has recently been used to make things better, whether it’s used in headphones, or to reduce battery charge times, or to desalinate and purify water. Now, we’re finally going to see graphene brought into the world of footwear and fitness. The University of Manchester has partnered up with British sportswear brand inov-8 to incorporate graphene into running shoes, and it’s the first company to ever do so. What’s even more amazing is that the kicks will officially be heading to the market some time in 2018.

These shoes have been tested in the laboratory, and the results show that the composite rubber outsoles are much stronger and more stretchy than traditional materials, making the shoes more resistant to wear and tear. This new kind of rubber, which has been developed with the National Graphene Institute at The University of Manchester, means that off-road runners and fitness athletes will no longer have to compromise the need for grip. There is a degree of stretch, durability and traction with these new shoes that has never been seen before in footwear.

Recommended Videos

“When added to the rubber used in inov-8’s G-Series shoes, graphene imparts all its properties, including its strength,” university reader Dr. Aravind Vijayaraghavan said in a recent statement, as reported by Tech Crunch. “Our unique formulation makes these outsoles 50-percent stronger, 50-percent more stretchy and 50-percent more resistant to wear than the corresponding industry standard rubber without graphene.”

Even though it is technically the thinnest material in the world, graphene is simultaneously the strongest material ever measured. It is 200 times stronger than steel, and at the same time incredibly flexible. The material can be twisted, stretched and folded without causing any kind of damage.

“Product innovation is the number-one priority for our brand,” inov-8 CEO Ian Bailey said. “It’s the only way we can compete against the major sports brands. The pioneering collaboration between inov-8 and the The University of Manchester puts us — and Britain — at the forefront of a graphene sports footwear revolution. And this is just the start, as the potential of graphene really is limitless. We are so excited to see where this journey will take us.”

Stephen Jordan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Stephen is a freelance writer and blogger, as well as an aspiring screenwriter. Working in front of a computer and digesting…
Sony’s table tennis robot made me think about what happens when AI gets a body
Ace starts as a flashy sports demo and quickly turns into a preview of AI moving from screens into factories, hospitals, farms, and homes
Ball, Sport, Tennis

I wanted to dismiss Sony’s table tennis robot as another expensive lab flex. A machine that can rally against elite players is impressive, sure, but it also sounds like the kind of demo built to make executives clap in a room where everyone already agreed to be impressed.

But table tennis is a nastier test than it looks. The ball is small, fast, spinning, and rude enough to change direction the moment it hits the table. Sony’s system faces something less forgiving than calculation. It has to see, predict, and act before the point is gone.

Read more
Scientists pretended to be delusional in AI chats. Grok and Gemini encouraged them.
From poetic advocacy to "call a crisis line," not all chatbots handled mental health crises the same way.
statue hugging its knees

Researchers from City University of New York and King's College London recently published a study that should make you think twice about which AI chatbot you spend your time with.

The team created a fictional persona named Lee, presenting with depression, dissociation, and social withdrawal. They then had Lee interact with five major AI chatbots: GPT-4o, GPT-5.2, Grok 4.1 Fast, Gemini 3 Pro, and Claude Opus 4.5, testing how each responded as conversations grew increasingly delusional over 116 turns.

Read more
Musk’s SpaceX eyes GPU manufacturing as Nvidia’s supply becomes a headache
SpaceX has big GPU dreams and even bigger IPO dream to back them up.
City, Architecture, Building

SpaceX is reportedly planning to manufacture its own GPUs, the chips that power artificial intelligence. The revelation comes from excerpts of its S-1 registration, a document companies file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission before going public. 

As reported by Reuters, SpaceX lists "manufacturing our own GPUs" among its biggest capital expenditures in the future. This comes a month after Elon Musk announced its own TeraFab chip factory focused on developing chips that can survive the harsh conditions of space and power its orbital AI data centers. 

Read more