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By Teik-Cheng LIM and Xianning XIE
s the names suggest, nanoscience and nanotechnology
constitute the study and the application of objects with
at least one of the dimensions smaller than 100
nanometres. A nanometre is a billionth of a metre or 1/80,000
the diameter of a human hair. Figure 1 gives an idea of its scale.
At this level, objects are so small that they can no longer be
assumed to be continuous media but rather to consist of discrete
elements made up of atoms and molecules; that is, nanoscale
objects and their behaviour/performance can best be understood
from the molecular viewpoint.
Since early civilisation, mankind learnt that metals can be melted
and recast into desired mould-determined shapes. At the dawn of
this millennium, Anat Hatzor and Paul S Weiss from Pennsylvania
State University developed the smallest-ever mould on the scale
of a few molecules. The mould consists of parallel gold
nanostructures on a silicate substrate developed using standard
electron-beam lithography. By applying layers of organic molecules,
the widths of the gold nanostructures widen, thereby narrowing
the gaps between the strips of gold. These gaps work as the mould
for casting thin wires 15-70nm wide. With a spacing of
10-40nm, these gaps allow numerous nanowires to be moulded
at one time.
Most nanotubes, if not all, are made from carbon. Erman Bengu and Laurence D Marks recently
developed nanotubes from two elements - boron and nitrogen. These boron nitride nanotubes
(BNNTs) have higher tolerance to heat and are less likely to oxidise.
To produce BNNT, they sprayed boron and energetic nitrogen atoms onto a heated tungsten
surface in a vacuum so that the nanotubes grew as a kind of hair. The BNNT, according to Marks, has the potential for use in reducing friction on bearings in heavy machinery.
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