Nano Technology For 1D, 2D, 3D
Nano Technology For 1D, 2D, 3D
Nano Technology For 1D, 2D, 3D
It’s dealing with functional systems either based on the use of sub-
units with specific size-dependent properties or of individual or
combined functionalized sub-units.
Human blood cells are 2,000 to 5,000 nm long, a strand of DNA has a
diameter of 2.5 nm, and a line of ten hydrogen atoms is one nm.
Properties of Nanomaterials
Unique properties
They have very high magneto resistance
They have lower melting point, high solid state phase
transition pressure, lower Debye temperature and high self
diffusion coefficient
They have high catalytic activity and lower ferroelectric
phase transition temperature
1. IMPROVED TRANSPORTATION
Today, most airplanes are made from metal despite the fact that
diamond has a strength-to-weight ratio over 50 times that of
aerospace aluminum.
Diamond is expensive, it is not possible to make it in the required
shapes, and it shatters. Nanotechnology will let us inexpensively
make shatterproof diamond in exactly the shapes we want.
Nanotechnology will dramatically reduce the costs and increase the
capabilities of space ships and space flight.
The strength-to-weight ratio and the cost of components are
absolutely critical to the performance and economy of space ships:
with nanotechnology, both of these parameters will be improved.
Nanotechnology will also provide extremely powerful computers
with which to guide both those ships and a wide range of other
activities in space.
5. MEDICAL USES
It is not modern medicine that does the healing, but the cells themselves: we
are but onlookers.
If we had surgical tools that were molecular both in their size and precision,
we could develop a medical technology that for the first time would let us
directly heal the injuries at the molecular and cellular level that are the root
causes of disease and ill health.
With the precision of drugs combined with the intelligent guidance of the
surgeon's scalpel, we can expect a quantum leap in our medical capabilities.