Chapter-I Nanotechnology: Introduction
Chapter-I Nanotechnology: Introduction
Chapter-I Nanotechnology: Introduction
NANOTECHNOLOGY: INTRODUCTION
Nanotechnology is the study of manipulating matter on an atomic
and molecular scale. Generally, nanotechnology deals with developing
materials, devices, or other structures possessing at least one dimension
sized from 1 to 100 nanometres. Quantum mechanical effects are
important at this quantum-realm scale.
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Materials and Materials will be stronger, lighter, harder, self-repairing and safer.
Manufacturing Structural carbon and ceramic materials ten times stronger than steel
for use in industrial applications.
Environmental Water purification and desalinization with at least 10 times less energy
and Energy that state-of-the-art reverse osmosis,Major improvement in the
efficiency of energy conversion, storage, use of renewable energy
sources, and increasing the efficiency of solar cells,Decontaminating
the contaminated lands,Reducing global warming and healing up the
ozone layer.
Electronics and Nanometre structures for minuscule transistors and memory chips that
computers will improve the computer speed and efficiency by factors of millions.
Changes in communication by increasing bandwidth a hundred times.
Possibilities for thinking and self-replicating machines.
Medical and Effective and less expensive health care by remote and treatment
Health deviceSjUse of tiny medical devices that will minimize collateral
damage of human tissues, Expanding the life spans.
Space and Aircraft Lightweight, fast, low powered, pilot-Iess microspacecraft for
continuous presence in space outside of the solar system,Automobiles
using clean, renewable and inexpensive fuels very efficiently at high
mileage.
Focussed research programs on Nanotechnology have been
initiated in almost all industrialised countries. Many initiatives are
being proposed and being implemented around the globe. The following
are some of the initiatives, which are detailed in the following table for
major industrialised countries, like USA, European Union and Germany
nations.
1.4 PERCEPTIONS OF NANOTECHNOLOGY
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This shows how comprehensive it is. This also reveals the fact that,
Nanotechnology has appHcations in a range of markets and cut across a
variety of disciplines. The simple definition, which the study deals, is
defined below. Nanotechnology (NT) can be defined as the creation and
use of materials, devices and systems in a size range of molecular and
atomic scale.
Nanotechnology, 2002) or
(ii.) 1/10.000 times the size of a bacteria (Drexler, 1986, p.l 1), or
(iii.) 1000timessmaller than the present micro-metre devices or
(iv.) 10 times the diameter of a hydrogen atom.
An early promoter of the industrial applications of
Nanotechnology, Albert Franks, defined it as 'that area of science and
technology, where dimensions and tolerances in the range of O.lnm to
100 nm play a critical role' (ION, 2002).
1.5 DISCIPLINES OF NANOTECHNOLOGY
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traditional fields and various disciplines is well illustrated in Figure 1.4,
which also shows the scales of the areas of interaction. There is
considerable debate in the scientific community about the boundaries
of the new disciplines emerging from this convergence e.g. between
microtechnology and nanotechnology, but it is becoming clear that, in
practice, no clear division can be made. Thus, for example, sensors and
bio-chips at nano-scale need to be packaged for commercial applications
using microtechnology.
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1.6 APPROACHS TO NANOTECHNOLOGY
Nanotechnology involves both top-down and bottom-up
approaches each of them is explained below:
1.6.1 Top-Down Approach
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For example, this technique is used routinely to create sub-lOOnm
sections of material for analysis in Transmission electron microscopy,
(iv.) Atomic force microscope tips can be used as a nanoscale "write head"
to deposit a resist, which is then followed by an etching process to
remove material in a top-down method.
1.6.2 Bottom-Up Approach
It is envisioned that rather than being produced through large
chunks of material being sawed, planed, and ground to form, tiny
molecular machines, working from the bottom-up (see Figure 2.4),
construct most such objects.
PAST
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PRESENT
Nano-Scale
Manipulations of
organic and
at atomic and
BOTTOM-UP molecular scale
FUTURE
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machinery responsible for this is capable of such results because it
performs operations in parallel (that is, with many cells operating at the
same time through most of the growth process), and from the bottom-up.
With NT bottom-up approach, atoms will be specifically placed
and connected, all at very rapid rates, in a fashion similar to processes
found in living organisms. Presently, most of the industries are
manufacturing the nano-scale products, but they are approaching a nano-
scale through the traditional technology. Bottom-up approach is still a
vision. Both top-down and bottom-up approach defines the level of
advancement of NT. The key to the application of NT will be the
development of processes that control placement of individual atoms to
form products of great complexity at extremely small scale.
At these scales entirely new physical phenomena occur which can
be exploited to produce new devices, and hence the characteristics of
individual molecules and atoms in the material become more important
than the material's bulk properties. The theme of the field is "novel
performance through nanotechnology" (Siegel, Hu and Roco, 1999, p.4).
These seek to arrange smaller components into more complex assemblies,
(i.) DNA nanotechnology utilizes the specificity of Watson-Crick
base-pairing to construct well-defined structures out of DNA and
other nucleic acids,
(ii) Approaches from the field of "classical" chemical synthesis
(inorganic and organic synthesis) also aim at designing molecules
with well-defined shape (e.g. bis-peptides[14]).
(iii) More generally, molecular self-assembly seeks to use concepts of
supramolecular chemistry, and molecular recognition in particular,
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to cause single-molecule components to automatically arrange
themselves into some useful conformation,
(iv) Atomic force microscope tips can be used as a nanoscale "write
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nano layers, etc.]
Assembly
Nanostructures
solids/deposition, and
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2015
Future
Research
Agenda
2008
Under
Research
=- 2003
In Products &.
Under
Research
Development
Hierarchy Stages Time Scale of
Phases as of Today Developments
detail as follows:
1. Nanoparticles: At the simplest level are the nanoparticles.
Nanoparticles are sometimes referred to as nanomaterials. This is
evident, as the research communities have not reached consensus on NT
definition and its related terms. But there are working definitions among
the research group working in this area. Nanoparticles contain few
thousand atoms some are like quantum dots[15]. Presently,
nanoparticles exist in various products like paints, inks and ceramics. But
their range is expected to grow rapidly.
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in market. Nanomaterial is defined as any material that has unique
or novel properties, due to nanoscale[16] (nanometre-scale)
structuring (Ausman, 2003, February 14). These are formed by
incorporation or structuring of nanoparticles. Nanomaterials are the
main building blocks in NT processes; these are subdivided into
nanocrystals, nanotubes, nanopowders[17].The worldwide study
conducted by World Technology Evaluation Center (WTEC) panel on
research and development status of nanoparticles, nanostructured
materials and nanodevices states under its overarching findings that, it
is clear that materials can be nanostructured for novel performance
(Siegel, Hu and Roco, 1999, p.4). The study also revealed that, the
synthesis and control of materials in nanometre dimensions could access
new material properties and device characteristics in an unprecedented
way.
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