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Carbon Nanotubes You Can Live With
Science@Berkeley Lab, Berkeley Lab
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory),
U.S. Department of Energy (DoE) &
University of California
[ 26 July 2006 ]
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Semi-empirical SPICE Models for Carbon Nanotube FET Logic
Chris Dwyer, Moky Cheung, & Daniel J. Sorin, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Duke University
[ 17-19 August 2004 ] (Adobe PDF file)
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Scientists create first silicon circuit using carbon nanotubes
Sarah Yang, Stanford Report (SR),
Stanford University [ 14 January 2004 ]
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Carbon nanotube memory devices of high charge storage stability
J. B. Cui, R. Sordan, M. Burghard & K. Kern, Max-Planck-Institut fuer Festkoerperforschung
(Germany)
[ 3 July 2002 ] (Adobe PDF file)
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Electronic properties of multiwalled carbon nanotubes in an embedded vertical array
Jun Li, Ramsey Stevens, Lance Delzeit, Hou Tee Ng,
Alan Cassell, Jie Han, M. Meyyappan, NASA Ames Research Center,
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA)
[ 8 April 2002 ] (Adobe PDF file)
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“The emerging fields of nanoscience and nanoengineering are leading
to unprecedented understanding and control over the fundamental building
blocks of all physical things. This is likely to change the way almost
everything — from vaccines to computers to automobile tires to
objects not yet imagined — is designed and made.” —
The Interagency Working Group on Nanoscience, Engineering and Technology
Nanotechnology is “the manipulation, precision placement, measurement,
modeling, and creation of sub-100 nanometer scale matter.”
(The Nanotech Report) A more comprehensive definition courtesy of
Nanotechnology at NASA states,
“Nanotechnology is the creation of functional materials, devices and
systems through control of matter on the nanometer length scale (1-100
nanometers), and exploitation of novel phenomena and properties (physical,
chemical, biological, mechanical, electrical...) at that length
scale.”
Nanotechnology is an exciting emerging technology incorporating
nanoscience, the study of objects ranging from one to one hundred
nanometers in size (A nanometer is one billionth of a meter.), and
nanoengineering, the manipulation of individual atoms and molecules to
create materials and structures with new properties and build nanomachines
capable of functionality not attainable at larger scales. This
technology will shape our future in ways we have not yet begun to
comprehend.
Potential and existing nanotechnology applications include improved
semiconductor photolithography techniques; smaller electronic
components; high density data storage; stronger, lighter-weight,
self-repairing or self-replicating materials for use in vehicles such
as automobiles, aircraft, spacecraft and space launch vehicles;
biomolecular motors and nanomachines; biobots that can work within
the human body to repair tissue damage and destroy tumors or disease
organisms; tags and markers for use in medical research and
imaging; microscopic sensors; improved solar power and fuel cell
technologies; materials exhibiting increased thermal protection
properties; waste recycling and pollution control; and even exotic
concepts such as terraforming and space elevators.
We believe nanotechnology will establish itself as the leading technology
of the decade, with close ties to the fields of molecular biology and
materials science. Learn more about the ever-increasing importance of
nanotechnology from some of the most respected sources in the field.
Authored by Kenneth L. Anderson.
Original article published 20 September 2003.
Follow links to the right to learn more about carbon nanotube technology and
carbon nanotube research. Check Related Links for additional
topics of interest relating to nanotechnology and associated scientific
topics and disciplines such as MEMS (Microelectromechanical Systems),
materials science, robotics and biotechnology. View the
Nanotechnology
SiteMap for a complete list of our nanotechnology and
nanotech-related topics.
See
Nanotechnology Jobs & MEMS Jobs if you are seeking a
career in nanotechnology. High tech job seekers will also find valuable
resources under
Tech, Science & Engineering Jobs.
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