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nanotechnology |
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nanotechnologyExperimental technology using individual atoms or molecules as the components of minute machines, measured by the nanometre, or millionth of a millimetre. Nanotechnology research in the 1990s focused on testing molecular structures and refining ways to manipulate atoms using a scanning tunnelling microscope. The ultimate aim is to create very small computers and molecular machines which could perform vital engineering or medical tasks. The scanning tunnelling microscope can be used to see and position single atoms and molecules, and to drill holes a nanometre (billionth of a metre) across in a variety of materials. The instrument can be used for ultrafine etching; the entire 28 volumes of the Encyclopaedia Britannica could be engraved on the head of a pin. In the USA, a complete electric motor has been built, which is less than 0.1 mm/0.004 in across with a top speed of 600,000 rpm. It is etched out of silicon, using the ordinary methods of chip manufacturers.
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The text was developed from courses on nanophysics and nanotechnology and takes a physical approach to discussing nanostructures, methods of growth and manipulation, characterization methods with a focus on optical analyzing methods and nanooptics, and nanoarchitectures and applications in optics, electronics, quantum computers, molecular nanostructures, biology, and soft matter. The "microbot" measures just a quarter of a millimetre, or "two or three human hairs wide," said lead scientist James Friend, from the Nanophysics Laboratory at Monash University, Australia. Developed from courses on nanophysics and nanotechnology, this textbook covers the fundamental physics of nanostructures, methods of growth and manipulation, characterization methods with a focus on optical analyzing methods and nanooptics, a discussion of nano-architectures and the latest applications in optics, electronics, quantum computers, molecular nanostructures, biology and soft matter. |
Nanophysics |
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