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Nanoscale Science“Marvels of an invisible world” was how a recent article on nanotechnology in the German Manager Magazin depicted one of the great hopes in the area of novel technological developments. But what’s behind it? What is nanotechnology and what are nanoscale sciences? And why is this seen as one of the key technologies for the future? It’s the little things that count in researchNanoscale science and nanotechnology deal literally with the small things in life. One million of the objects studied would fit onto the dot on this “i”. Unimaginable? Invisible? Impossible to comprehend? Not at all. Objects of such tiny proportions can be observed, measured, analyzed and modified. Around the world, nanoscientists are using ever more sensitive instruments. And they are now able to detect and manipulate atoms which have a diameter of about 0.3nm. Breakthrough with new materials and microscopesThe rapid advances being made today in nanoscale science were only made possible by new materials (e.g. carbon nanotubes) and the development of a special microscope, for which its inventors were awarded the Nobel prize. In 1981, a group of IBM scientists led by Gerd Binning, Heinrich Rohrer and Christoph Gerber invented the scanning tunneling microscope, which enabled the individual atoms of a surface to be visualized for the first time. This microscope is based on principles quite different from those of the light or electron microscopes that were known hitherto. In the scanning tunneling microscope, the surface of a sample is scanned in minute detail by a fine measuring probe to produce an accurate image of this surface. The laws of physics ensure that a far higher resolution is achieved than was possible using a light or electron microscope. The invention of the scanning tunneling microscope was followed by further developments based on a similar principle (e.g. AFM, atomic force microscope), all of which are described as scanning probe microscopes. Wide range of applicationsIn addition to their high resolution, scanning probe microscopes also offer the crucial advantage that they do not require any major sample preparation, so that biomolecules can be analyzed in their natural environment. And in the process they not only provide exact images of surfaces, with their aid various physical and chemical properties can also be measured. In addition, scanning probe microscopes can also be used as tools and selectively modify samples. The tip of an atomic force microscope, for example, can be made to vibrate like a miniature pneumatic hammer and etch information into a surface. Scanning tunneling microscopes can also be used for writing by “packing” and shifting individual atoms. The beginning of the nano ageAs our understanding of the laws and principles of the nano world grows, so nanoscale science will be
applied to nanotechnology, which will bring about changes in many aspects of our lives. And we are
already starting to benefit from its achievements. Sun protection factors in suncreams and special color
effects in car paints are based on nano particles; antireflection coatings on glasses and contact lenses
are being optimized thanks to nanotechnology; blood filters of dialysis patients can today be reused for
the benefit of patients with the added bonus of reducing costs, on the basis of nanotechnological
studies, and new nanotechnology-based dosage forms for medicines are also coming onto the market. In the
future, nanotechnology will have a major influence on many different areas of information and communications
technology and life sciences, as well as on the sustainable use of resources. New nanomaterials and storage
media, atomic switches, nano robots for the human body, artificial mechanical noses and ears – these are
examples of developments which scientists around the world are already working on. Further innovations will
come in the next few years and show why nanotechnology is being described today as a key technology of the
future. As Nobel prize laureate Gerd Binning observed “the nano age has only just begun”.
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