The current state of nanotechnology

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Nanotechnology is often viewed as an extension of material science, with its applications primarily in chemistry and materials development. The discussion highlights the existence of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and the emerging field of nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS), which operate at the nanoscale and have potential applications in gas detection and fundamental physics experiments. Recent advancements in atomically precise manufacturing, such as creating molecules one at a time, could revolutionize fields like quantum computing. While the potential of nanotechnology is vast, achieving its full capabilities remains a significant challenge. Overall, the conversation underscores the ongoing research and speculative nature of nanotechnology's future applications.
Avatrin
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Hi

My question is not long, but it is very broad; Is nanotechnology simpy just a rebranding of material science?

Is there anything else to it? I have not really seen it used outside chemistry and material science. Do simple nanomachinery exist?

I guess on a more speculative level it exists, but has something actually been created that is more than just another, maybe more advanced, material?
 
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Avatrin said:
Hi

My question is not long, but it is very broad; Is nanotechnology simpy just a rebranding of material science?

Is there anything else to it? I have not really seen it used outside chemistry and material science. Do simple nanomachinery exist?

I guess on a more speculative level it exists, but has something actually been created that is more than just another, maybe more advanced, material?
Do you know how smartphones sense orientation and movement? :smile:
 
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berkeman said:
Do you know how smartphones sense orientation and movement?

Those are usually called MEMS sensors. Micro electronic mechanical systems.

The smallest features of these systems will sometimes push the limits of nano-meter scale.

https://www.foresight.org/nano/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanotechnology
https://www.google.com/search?q=nano+technology&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8

All indicate that nanotechnology starts at 100nm. Are there any MEMS devises that should more accurately be called NEMS?

BoB
 
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Sure, NEMS is a research field in itself (I have colleagues working on NEMS). That said, I am not sure if there are any commercially available NEMS devices yet.

The answer to your question will depend on your definition of "nanoscience". There is certainly a LOT of work going on using nm sized devices and making electronic devices with feature sizes smaller than 100nm has been routine for a many,many years.
 
What applications are NEMS useful for? Are they the same sort of thing as MEMS only smaller or are there novel applications only achievable at the smaller scale?

BoB
 
I believe the application most frequently mentioned is gas detection; some NEMS resonators are extremely sensitive to any extra mass to the point where they can "sense" even single atoms attaching landing on the resonator. The obvious application of this would be a machine that could the do the job of a mass spectrometer but without having to ionize the particles first (which is a major limitation with current mass specs).

There are also a whole range of fundamental physics experiments where NEMS devices (especially resonators) are used
 
I've been fascinated by this article for sometime, http://www.nature.com/news/fire-up-the-atom-forge-1.21017
"Electron microscopy is on the brink of a transition. Soon the imaging tool could be used to create structures atom by atom. This sort of control over atomic architecture could transform our basic scientific understanding of materials and pave the way to new classes of devices for quantum computing, spin sensing and more".

Today I came across, http://www.nature.com/news/elusive-triangulene-created-by-moving-atoms-one-at-a-time-1.21462
"Researchers at IBM have created an elusive molecule by knocking around atoms using a needle-like microscope tip. The flat, triangular fragment of a mesh of carbon atoms, called triangulene1, is too unstable to be made by conventional chemical synthesis, and could find use in electronics."

Making molecules one at a time might not seem very promising, but Gross points out that current quantum computers, such as the Quantum Experience developed at IBM, use only a handful of quantum bits, or qubits, each of which could correspond to a single molecule. Even if you need to make 100 such molecules "by hand", he says, "it would be worth going through that manual labour".

http://www.nature.com/articles/nnan...HNyBa0G7eKA==&tracking_referrer=www.nature.co
 
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Here is a good article about nanotechnology.
If nanotechnology is perfectly created most disease can be cured.
But we are way far from perfection.
 
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