Sunday, September 25, 2005

Nanotechnology - how small?

Here is a companion item on nanotechnology to the story below.

Physicists have directly measured how close speeding atoms can come to a surface before the atoms' wavelengths change.

The scientists at the University of Arizona say, "The measurement tells nanotechnologists how small they can make extremely tiny devices before a microscopic force between atoms and surfaces, called van der Waals interaction, becomes a concern. The result is important both for nanotechnology, where the goal is to make devices as small as a few tens of billionths of a meter, and for atom optics, where the goal is to use the wave nature of atoms to make more precise sensors and study quantum mechanics."

Learn more about this interesting study by visiting the University of Arizona's news story. The work is reported in Physical Review Letters.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I'm fascinated with the teensy-weensy too. Here's a link to an article about being able to use NMR on microfluidic devices. The thing that excites me is that the technology for exploring the nano- and atomic-scale worlds is still growing in leaps and bounds. That means more detailed knowledge of things like proteins and other living molecules is sure to follow.
http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/MSD-NMR.html