Nanotechnology/Overviews

=Internet Resources=

Handbooks and Encyclopedias
These are only accessible for subscribers (which is one reason this Wikibook on Nanotechnology was started):
 * Encyclopedia of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, 10-Volume Set
 * Handbook of Theoretical and Computational Nanotechnology, 10-Volume Set
 * Springer Handbook of Nanotechnology

Websites and newsletters

 * International Council on Nanotechnology (ICON) a multi-stakeholder group dedicated to the safe, responsible and beneficial development of nanotechnology. ICON serves as an aggregator for news and research related to nanotechnology environment, health and safety.
 * ICON Virtual Journal of Nanotechnology Environment, Health and Safety compiles papers in peer-reviewed journals that address EHS issues in nanotechnology.
 * Virtual journal of nanotechnology compiles nano-related papers in peer reviewed journals that do not specialize solely in nanotechnology.
 * ACS Nanotation
 * Nanotechweb.org
 * Nanoforum
 * Nanowerk
 * nanoRISK
 * Physorg.com
 * Foresight Nanotech Institute
 * Center for Responsible Nanotechnology
 * A-Z of nanotechnology
 * Google Directory - Nanotechnology (sourced from the Open Directory Project)
 * Scientific American Nanotechnology Page
 * NanoEd Resource Portal managed by the National Center for Learning and Teaching in Nanoscale Science and Engineering (NCLT)
 * NanoHub.org
 * UnderstandingNano

Search engines
There are many ways to find information in scientific literature and some that even specialize in nanotechnology. Apart from the free search engines and useful tools such as Google scholar and Google Desktop, there are several more dedicated commercial services:
 * ICON Virtual Journal of Nanotechnology Environment, Health and Safety (VJ-NanoEHS) compiles papers in peer-reviewed journals that address EHS issues in nanotechnology.
 * ISI - Web of Science Database contains peer reviewed journals, their references and citations. It also has very useful tools such as 'find related papers' that searches for papers sharing the same references as the entry you're looking at. This is the database behind the compilation of the journal citation factors.
 * Knovel - Online Handbook Collection and Database is an extensive collection of handbooks and tables.
 * PROLA - the Physical Review Online Archive searches Physical Review journals.
 * Rubber Bible Online is a physical chemistry handbook which contains tables of physical and chemical data.
 * Spin AIP Scitation searches related journals.
 * Web of Science by ISI generates the impact factors (see journals below).
 * Virtual Journal of Nanotechnology collects nanotech related papers from non-nano specialized journals.
 * Derwent Patent database

=Peer reviewed Journals= Overview of the nanotechnology related journals and their impact factors (2007 values):


 * Impact factors are only guides to how much a papers is referenced in the years just after publication.
 * Please add comments about the journals and update impact factors!
 * The Physics and Astronomy Classification Scheme PACS2006 and Nanoscale Science and Technology - Collection of Applicable Terms from PACS 2006

=Conferences=


 * NSTI Nanotech 2008
 * TNT - Trends in Nanotechnology 2007;2006
 * MNE - Micro and Nanoengineering 2007;2008
 * Virtual Conference on Nanoscale Science and Technology
 * Foresight Unconference Vision Weekend NanoBioInfoCognoSocioPhysical technologies
 * 
 * International Microprocess and Nanotechnology Conference, Japan
 * Nanosafe 2008: International Conference on Safe production and use of nanomaterials

=Nanotech Products=

Please add more products, comments and more info about the products if you have any!

See also the List of nanotechnology applications in wikipedia

Woodrow Wilsom Center for International Scholars is starting a Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies (website should be under construction at www.nanoproject.org) that among other things will try to map the available 'nano'products and work to ensure possible risks are minimized and benefits are realized.

Emerging products

 * 2008 MultiProbe’s AFM Nanoprober is now qualified for 32nm technology nodes.
 * Intel will make products with 45 nm linewidth transistors available from 2008
 * Batteries are increasingly incorporating nanostructures.
 * Flexible, cheaper, or more luminous Flat screen displays
 * Pressure-sensitive mobile devices

Available in 2006

 * Surface coatings: TCnano, Nanocover, Stay clean.

Available in 2005

 * Molybdenum disulfide catalytic nanoparticles in Brimm catalysts made by Haldor Topsøe
 * Forbes top ten nanoproducts in 2005
 * Apples IPod with sub 100nm elements in its memory chips
 * Choleterol reducing nanoencapsulated oil,Shemen Industries Canola Active.
 * Nanocrystals improve the consistency of chocolate
 * Zelen Fullerene C-60 Day Cream
 * Easton Stealth CNT baseball bat
 * Nanotex textiles once again
 * ArcticShield polyester socks from ARC Outdoors with 19nm silver particles that kill fungs to reduce odor.
 * NanoGuard developed by Behr Process for improved paint hardness.
 * Pilkingtons self-cleaning 'Activ Glass'.
 * NanoBreeze Air Purifier from NanoTwin Technologies, where the UV light from a fluorescent tube cleans the air by photochemical reactions in nanoparticles.

Available in 2004

 * Cold cathode carbon nanotube emitters for X-ray analysis by Oxford instruments[]
 * Forbes has an overview in 2004 of what they consider the top ten nanotech products:
 * Footwarmers with nanporous aerogel for 3-20 times lighter than comparable insulating materials used in shoes (produced by Aspen Aerogels).
 * Matress covers with nanotex fibres that can be washed (Simmonos bedding company).
 * Better golf drivers with carbon nanotube enforced metal composites (produced by Maruman & Co) and nanocomposite containing golf balls (produced by NanoDynamics)
 * The company 'Bionova' apparently adds some nanoproducts to their 'personalized product line'.
 * EnviroSystems make a nanoemulsive disinfectant cleaner, called EcoTru, that is EPA Tox category 4 registered (meaning very safe to use)
 * EnviroSystems also make a spray-on version of this product.
 * BASF makes a nanoparticle coating for building materials called Mincor, that reduces their wettabililty.
 * A nanostructured coating produced by Valley View, called Clarity Defender, improves visibility through windscreens in rain. Another company, Nano-Film, makes a similar coating on sunglasses.
 * Flex-Power makes a gel containing nanoscale liposomes for soothing aching muscles
 * 3M espe Dental adhesive with silica nanoparticle filler.

Available in 2003

 * NanoGuard Zink Oxide nanoparticles for sunscreens FDA approved
 * Forbes 2003 top ten nanoproduct includes:
 * High performance ski wax, Cerax Nanowax.
 * Nanotex textiles in ski jackets from Ziener
 * Nanotex textiles
 * Plenitude Revitalift antiwrinkle cream by L'Oréal contains nanocapsules with vitamin A
 * organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) in Sony camera flat screen display
 * Nanofilm coatings for ani-reflection and scratch resistance
 * Zink oxide nanoparticles in Sunscreen by BASF
 * carbon nanotube enforced tennis rackets and nanopolymer enforced tennis balls

Available in 2000
Nanotex makes textiles where the clothing fibres have been coating in nanoscale fibres to change the textile wettability. This makes the textile much more stain resistant.

Companies making nanotech research equipment

 * MultiProbe Manufacturer of a 1-to-6 head Atomic Force nanoprobing tool used in failure analysis, that combines multi-scan fault isolation imaging with nanoprobing electrical capabilities. For process technology node measurements of 32nm, 45nm, 65nm, 90nm or larger.
 * Veeco AFM and related equipment
 * Zyvex nanomanipulation equipment
 * Nanofactory in-situ TEM manipulation equipment
 * SmarAct nanomanipulators
 * Capres micro four point conductance measurement probes
 * ImageMetrology SPIP software for SPM analysis
 * QuantumWise software for simulating nanosystems
 * AFM and related equipment

Products that have been nanostructured for decades

 * Catalysts
 * Haldor Topsøe
 * Computer processesors are increasingly made of nanoscale systems
 * Intel

Non-nanotech products and a warning
Not everything that says nano is nano - and given the hype surrounding nanotechnology you will see an increasing number of 'nano' products that have nothing to do with it. It is worrying when sometimes problems arise with non-nano products and this adds to the 'scare' that is present in the public, fuelled by the newspapers where they are just waiting for a nice scandal... an example was the product Magic Nano from a German company that made a number of users sick when inhaling the aerosol cleaning product - which in the end turned out to have nothing 'nano' in it. There is good reason to be very alert to such issues. Not all countries have legislation in place to secure the consumers against the possible dangers present in nanoparticles and some products could end being marketed before having been tested well enough. Though this example turned out to be 'non-nano', we will probably meet new cases shortly that are truly 'nano'. On this background environmental and health aspects will be an important part of this book.

=Suppliers=

Nanomaterials
 * Sigma-Aldrich
 * Zyvex
 * overview of companies making nanoparticles and related equipment

Nanolithography
 * NIL Technology sells stamps for nanoimprint lithography (NIL) and provides imprint services.

Quantum Dots
 * Evident technologies

=A nano-timeline=

Overview of some important events in nanotechnology

See also History of Nanotechnology in Wikipedia

=A nano-scale overview=

Just to get a sense of proportion


 * Distances between objects can be measured with sub Å precision with STM, laser interferometry and its even done continuously in a standard airbag acceleration sensor chip that costs a few dollars and senses the vibrations of a micro-inertial mass element with femtometer precision (10^-15 m).

=Bibliography=
 * G. Ali Mansoori, Principles of Nanotechnology, Molecular-Based Study of Condensed Matter in Small Systems, (New Jersey: World Scientific, 2006).
 * Monthioux, Marc; Kuznetsov, Vladimir L. (2006). "Who should be given the credit for the discovery of carbon nanotubes?". Carbon 44. doi:10.1016/j.carbon.2006.03.019. Retrieved on 2007-07-26.

=References=

See also notes on editing this book Nanotechnology/About.

the nanotechnology pioneers by Steven A. Edwards Engines of Creation 2.0: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology by K. Eric Drexler