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Blacksburg, Va., July 16, 2004 --
Scientists and engineers worldwide are taking control of matter at its
smallest scale, individual atoms, to create new materials and devices
that are making electronics smaller and promise a future with highly
efficient flexible solar cells and molecular machinery to augment human
systems.
This new field of science, called nanotechnology, has unfolded so
quickly that the recent university courses in nanotechnology have had
to depend upon compendiums of journal articles as their textbooks or
books geared to majors in a specific field.
Now, however, three scientists have pulled together some 60 active
researchers across many disciplines to write a broad-based textbook
specifically for students. Introduction to Nanoscale Science and
Technology, has just been released by Kluwer Academic Publishers
(www.wkap.nl/prod/b/1-4020-7720-3). The book was created by
James R. Heflin Jr.
of the Virginia Tech Department of Physics, Stephane Evoy of
the University of Pennsylvania Department of Electrical and Systems
Engineering, and Massimiliano Di Ventra of the University of California
at San Diego Department of Physics.
Heflin and Evoy created and co-taught a nanotechnology course for
seniors and first-year graduate students at Virginia Tech in spring
2001. When Evoy went to the University of Pennsylvania that summer, he
introduced the course there. Kluwer saw the course on the Virginia Tech
website and approached Heflin in September 2001 about writing a
textbook.
"When I said, ''''No way do I have the time to write a comprehensive
textbook,'' they suggested I could form a team and invite contributors,
so that''''s what I did," Heflin said.
He invited Di Ventra, who was at
Virginia Tech at the time, and Evoy to be co-editors.
"We did an outline of topics, then looked for people to write the
various chapters," Heflin said. "The authors range from high-profile
senior people to young, fast-rising scientists. Most of the
contributors are faculty members at universities such as Virginia Tech,
the University of Pennsylvania, Penn State, MIT, UCLA, the University
of Washington, University of Virginia, and Johns Hopkins. There are
also contributors from the national labs, such as Oak Ridge, and from
industry, such as Hitachi.
"We wanted a broad-based, interdisciplinary book, like the field
itself, and we wanted it to be accessible to students in chemistry,
physics, biology, and any engineering discipline," Heflin said. "I
think anyone with a science or engineering background could learn from
this book. Stephane, Max, and I found we learned a great deal ourselves
as we edited the submissions. We think the book will also be an
excellent reference resource for academic, government, and industry
researchers."
The textbook consists of 23 chapters in seven sections, beginning
with the fundamentals, how to make and characterize nanoscale materials
and an overview of the new classes of materials. Nanotechnology was
enabled by the microscopy technologies developed in the 1980s that
provide atomic-scale resolution and, later, nanoscale modification of
surfaces. The authors describe the top-down approach, or lithography,
as "similar to the work of a sculptor carving a face from a block of
marble." On the other hand, the bottom-up approach is the assembly of
individual atoms and molecules to form complex systems.
The second section of the textbook looks at the new materials that
have become the building blocks of nanotechnology – the hollow carbon
molecules called fullerenes and nanotubes; nanocomposite materials
designed to display the properties of their minute components; and
collections of small numbers of atoms with altered electronic and
optical properties, called quantum dots.
The remaining five sections describe applications. "A major goal of
nanotechnology is to develop materials and devices that outperform
existing technologies," the editors explain in the text''''s
introduction. Thus, there is a section on electronics. Nanotechnology
means smaller and faster microelectronic devices with individual
molecules built as electronic components and even single electron
transistors.
A section on nanoscale magnetic systems looks at quantum computing
and magnetic storage. A section on nanoelectromechanical systems
examines nanomachined mechanical structures and single-chip systems
that can sense, compute, and communicate. A section on photonic
materials reviews inorganic semiconductor systems and looks ahead to
organic, self-assembled materials with a range of applications, such as
improved solar cells, modulators for communication systems, and
flexible flat panel displays.
The final section provides an overview of nanoscale biological
systems, including those that aim to replicate the function of natural
structures, membranes, and fluids. Structures for bone growth, implants
that won''''t be rejected, and biomolecular motors to replicate natural
mechanical activity are examples.
Each chapter provides an overview, with examples selected for
educational value and written in a manner accessible to both science
and engineering disciplines. "We avoid jargon and overly-technical
terms," Heflin said.
All of the chapters have end-of-chapter questions. In most cases
these relate directly to the content of the chapter while other
questions require the student to look at reference material or beyond
for answers. Instructors can find the solutions on a password-protected
website.
To keep the cost down, the book is in black and white. But copies of
all the figures – most of them in color – are included in PowerPoint
files on a CD that accompanies each copy of the book. The text will
dramatically improve the learning experience, Heflin said.
"We had the green light for the book in the summer of 2002, and we
had all the chapters in hand by summer 2003," Heflin said. The book was
released in early July 2004.
"The next challenge is the rapid evolution of the field," Heflin
said. "In three years, the book will have to be substantially updated
to include the latest advances."
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