What
is nanotechnology?
Nanotechnology
is science, engineering, and technology conducted at the nanoscale,
which is about 1 to 100 nanometers.
Nanoscience and nanotechnology are the study and
application of extremely small things and can be used across all the other
science fields, such as chemistry, biology, physics, materials science, and
engineering.
The ideas and concepts
behind nanoscience and nanotechnology started with a talk entitled “There’s Plenty of Room at the
Bottom” by physicist
Richard Feynman at an American Physical Society meeting at the California
Institute of Technology (CalTech) on December 29, 1959, long before the term
nanotechnology was used. In his talk, Feynman described a process in which
scientists would be able to manipulate and control individual atoms and
molecules. Over a decade later, in his explorations of ultraprecision
machining, Professor Norio Taniguchi coined the term nanotechnology. It wasn't
until 1981, with the development of the scanning tunneling microscope that
could "see" individual atoms, that modern
It’s hard to imagine just
how small nanotechnology is. One nanometer is a billionth of a meter, or 10-9 of a meter. Here are a few illustrative
examples:
·
There
are 25,400,000 nanometers in an inch
·
A
sheet of newspaper is about 100,000 nanometers thick
·
On
a comparative scale, if a marble were a nanometer, then one meter would be the
size of the Earth
Fundamental
Concepts in Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
Nanoscience and nanotechnology involve the
ability to see and to control individual atoms and molecules. Everything on
Earth is made up of atoms—the food we eat, the clothes we wear, the buildings
and houses we live in, and our own bodies.
But something as small as an atom is
impossible to see with the naked eye. In fact, it’s impossible to see with the
microscopes typically used in a high school science classes. The microscopes
needed to see things at the nanoscale were invented relatively recently—about
30 years ago.
Once scientists had the right tools, such as
the scanning tunneling microscope (STM) and the atomic force
microscope (AFM), the age of nanotechnology was born.
Although modern nanoscience and
nanotechnology are quite new, nanoscale materials were used for
centuries. Alternate-sized gold and silver particles created colors in the
stained glass windows of medieval churches hundreds of years ago. The artists
back then just didn’t know that the process they used to create these beautiful
works of art actually led to changes in the composition of the materials they
were working with.
Today's scientists and engineers are
finding a wide variety of ways to deliberately make materials at the
nanoscale to take advantage of their enhanced properties such as higher
strength, lighter weight, increased control of light spectrum, and
greater chemical reactivity than their larger-scale counterparts.
Reference:
http://media.wiley.com/product_data/excerpt/53/07803108/0780310853.pdf
http://www.nano.gov/nanotech-101/what/nano-size
No comments:
Post a Comment