- Nanotechnology - Wikipedia
Nanotechnology is the manipulation of matter with at least one dimension sized from 1 to 100 nanometers (nm) At this scale, commonly known as the nanoscale, surface area and quantum mechanical effects become important in describing properties of matter
- Nanoscience - National Geographic Society
Nanoscience combines science, engineering, and technology to study matter and processes at the nanoscale The nanoscale is based on the nanometer, a unit of length equivalent to one billionth (10-9) of a meter
- Science Simplified: What Is Nanoscience? - SciTechDaily
Nanoscience is the science of the incredibly small — sizes that only the most high-tech of high-tech microscopes can see It is one of the hottest topics in all of science, touching on physics, biology, chemistry, geology, and materials science and engineering
- Nanoscience and technology - Latest research and news | Nature
Nanoscience and technology is the branch of science that studies systems and manipulates matter on atomic, molecular and supramolecular scales (the nanometre scale)
- Nanoscience - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Nanoscience is the new field embracing the sciences and engineering needed for designing, synthesizing and describing materials and devices at the level of atoms, molecules and supramolecular structures while leveraging on the unique properties and phenomena of matter at the nanometer length scale
- DOE Explains. . . Nanoscience - Department of Energy
Nanoscience is the study of matter at the nanoscale—dimensions between approximately 1 and 100 nanometers or 1,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair At these incredibly small scales, materials have unique phenomena that enable new applications
- Introduction to Nanoscience: Some Basics - Nanotechnology in STEM
An educational webpage introducing foundational concepts in nanoscience, covering nanoparticle types, size-dependent properties, quantum effects, surface energetics, and nanoscale processes, with emphasis on materials classification, optical and dissolution behaviors, and crystal growth mechanisms
- Future of nanoscience: what will the next 25 years of breakthroughs . . .
An article published in the journal Nano Letters earlier this year proposed what the next 25 years of nanoscience might look like Among the big issues that society must grapple with in the coming years, the environment, health and technology issues will undoubtedly have an outsized impact on nanoscience, pushing the field forwards
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