วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 11 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2552

What is nanotechnology?(7)

What is nanotechnology?
(1):> 1. The Significance of the Nanoscale
(2):>2. New Materials: Nanomaterials
(3):>2.1 Nanomaterials
(4):>3. Nanomaterial Science
(5):>3.1 Nanoscale in Two Dimensions
(6):>3.2 Nanoscale in Two Dimensions(cont.)
(7):>3.3 Nanoscale in Three Dimensions(cont.)
(8):>3.4 Nanoscale in Three Dimensions(cont.)

3.3 Nanoscale in Three Dimensions

a) NanoparticlesNanoparticles are often defined as particles of less than 100nm in diameter. We classify nanoparticles to be particles less than 100nm in diameter that exhibit new or enhanced size-dependent properties compared with larger particles of the same material. Nanoparticles exist widely in the natural world: for example as the products of photochemical and volcanic activity, and created by plants and algae. They have also been created for thousands of years as products of combustion and food cooking, and more recently from vehicle exhausts. Deliberately manufactured nanoparticles, such as metal oxides, are by comparison in the minority.Nanoparticles are of interest because of the new properties (such as chemical reactivity and optical behaviour) that they exhibit compared with larger particles of the same materials. For example, titanium dioxide and zinc oxide become transparent at the nanoscale, however are able to absorb and reflect UV light, and have found application in sunscreens. Nanoparticles have a range of potential applications: in the short-term in new cosmetics, textiles and paints; in the longer term, in methods of targeted drug delivery where they could be to used deliver drugs to a specific site in the body. Nanoparticles can also be arranged into layers on surfaces, providing a large surface area and hence enhanced activity, relevant to a range of potential applications such as catalysts.Manufactured nanoparticles are typically not products in their own right, but generally serve as raw materials, ingredients or additives in existing products. Nanoparticles are currently in a small number of consumer products such as cosmetics and their enhanced or novel properties may have implications for their toxicity. For most applications, nanoparticles will be fixed (for example, attached to a surface or within in a composite) although in others they will be free or suspended in fluid. Whether they are fixed or free will have a significant affect on their potential health, safety and environmental impacts.

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