1 / 19

Mark Welland Nanoscience Centre University of Cambridge Email: mew10@cam.ac.uk Web: http://www.nanoscience.cam.ac.uk

Nano- the smallest technology the greatest challenges. Mark Welland Nanoscience Centre University of Cambridge Email: mew10@cam.ac.uk Web: http://www.nanoscience.cam.ac.uk. Luzern, 20 th April 2004. I. Richard Feynman, 1960 and 1983. II.

shiela
Download Presentation

Mark Welland Nanoscience Centre University of Cambridge Email: mew10@cam.ac.uk Web: http://www.nanoscience.cam.ac.uk

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nano- the smallest technology the greatest challenges Mark Welland Nanoscience Centre University of Cambridge Email: mew10@cam.ac.uk Web: http://www.nanoscience.cam.ac.uk Luzern, 20th April 2004

  2. I Richard Feynman, 1960 and 1983

  3. II Norio Taniguchi, Tokyo Science University, 1971

  4. V Length scales Magnetic domain Electron Mean Free Path Light Phonon Wavelength 300 K 5 K Plasmon wavelength Molecules Scanned probe methods 0.1 1 10 100 1000 nanometres

  5. 400 Oe 100 Oe 100 Oe Shape, size and B-H loops 300nm 2.5nm thick Permalloy

  6. SPM

  7. H. Rohrer, IBM

  8. Nanotechnology • Enabling technology • Ultimate precision to fabricate materials and devices • Creation of new materials and devices • Learning from life • Impacts all technology sectors

  9. Science & Technology-some observations

  10. Scientists divorced from reality • Accelerating pace of technology • Public scares eg BSE, GM, MMR, human genome • Ubiquitous information • No such thing as never

  11. Nano-concerns

  12. Is it different to any other technology? • Are there any real concerns? • Balance present vs future • Need to make informed judgements • Need to communicate

  13. Environment and health-Nanoparticles

  14. They are not new!…not good enough • Are there proven and appropriate toxicology protocols? • Balance positive vs negative • Consider life cycle analysis • Evidence and concerns re toxicity of eg nanotubes and titania

  15. Ethics-Nano-sensing

  16. Combines ubiquitous sensing and ubiquitous information • Intrusion of privacy • Labelling • Stratification of society • Insurance

  17. What can scientists do?

  18. Hype is a two edged sword • Communicate • Broaden education to include some exposure to ethical, societal and environmental issues

  19. “Nanotechnology has given us the tools…to play with the ultimate toy box of nature – atoms and molecules. Everything is made from it….The possibilities to create new things appear limitless” Horst Stormer Lucent Technologies and Columbia University, Nobel Prize winner.

More Related