| Literature DB >> 31892180 |
Samer Bayda1, Muhammad Adeel2,3, Tiziano Tuccinardi4, Marco Cordani5, Flavio Rizzolio2,6.
Abstract
Nanoscience breakthroughs in almost every field of science and nanotechnologies make life easier in this era. Nanoscience and nanotechnology represent an expanding research area, which involves structures, devices, and systems with novel properties and functions due to the arrangement of their atoms on the 1-100 nm scale. The field was subject to a growing public awareness and controversy in the early 2000s, and in turn, the beginnings of commercial applications of nanotechnology. Nanotechnologies contribute to almost every field of science, including physics, materials science, chemistry, biology, computer science, and engineering. Notably, in recent years nanotechnologies have been applied to human health with promising results, especially in the field of cancer treatment. To understand the nature of nanotechnology, it is helpful to review the timeline of discoveries that brought us to the current understanding of this science. This review illustrates the progress and main principles of nanoscience and nanotechnology and represents the pre-modern as well as modern timeline era of discoveries and milestones in these fields.Entities:
Keywords: nanomaterials; nanomedicine; nanoparticles; nanoscience; nanotechnology
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31892180 PMCID: PMC6982820 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25010112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1A comparison of sizes of nanomaterial. Reproduced with permission from reference [2].
Figure 2The concept of top down and bottom up technology: different methods for nanoparticle synthesis.
Figure 3The Lycurgus cup. The glass appears green in reflected light (A) and red-purple in transmitted light (B). Reproduced with permission from reference [10].
Figure 4Effect of nanoparticles on the colors of the stained glass windows. Reproduced with permission from reference [14].
Figure 5Progresses in Nanotechnology.
Figure 6STM image of the Si(111)-7 × 7 reconstructed surface showing atomic scale resolution of the top-most layer of silicon atoms. Reproduced with permission from reference [22].
Figure 735 Xenon atoms positioned on a nickel (110) substrate using a STM to form IBM logo. Reproduced with permission from reference [23].
Figure 8Schematic of a C60 buckyball (Fullerene) (A) and carbon nanotube (B).
Figure 9Progress in nanoscience and nanotechnology in different fields of science.
Evolution Timeline of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology.
| Year | Event | References |
|---|---|---|
| 4th Century | Lycurgus Cup (Colored glass). | [ |
| 500–1450 | Cathedrals (Stained glasses windows). | [ |
| 1450–1600 | Deruta Pottery (Iridescent/metallic clusters). | [ |
| 1857 | Michael Faraday (Synthesis of colloidal ruby gold nanoparticles). | [ |
| 1908 | Gustav Mie (Light scattering nanoparticles). | [ |
| 1928 | Edward Synge (Near-field optical microscope). | [ |
| 1931 | Max Knoll and Ernst Ruska (invention of transmission electron microscope (TEM)). | [ |
| 1936 | Erwin Müller (Invention of field electron microscope). | [ |
| 1947 | William Shockley, Walter Brattain and John Bardeen (Discovery of the semiconductor transistor). | [ |
| 1951 | Erwin Müller (Invention of field-ion microscope, first to see atoms on the surface). | [ |
| 1953 | James Watson and Francis Crick (Discovery of DNA). | [ |
| 1956 | Arthur Von Hippel (Molecular Engineering). | [ |
| 1958 | Leo Esaki (Electron tunneling). | [ |
| 1959 | Richard Feynman (There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom). | [ |
| 1960 | Charles Plank and Edward Rosinski (Zeolites and catalysis). | [ |
| 1963 | Stephen Papell (Invention of Ferrofluids). | [ |
| 1965 | Gordon E. Moore (Moore’s Law). | [ |
| 1970 | Eiji Osawa (Predicted the existence of C60 in the form of icosahedron). | [ |
| 1974 | Norio Taniguchi (First use of the term “Nanotechnology”). | [ |
| 1974 | Mark A. Ratner and Arieh Aviram (Molecular electronics). | [ |
| 1977 | Richard P. Van Duyne (Discovery of Surface Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS)). | [ |
| 1980 | Jacop Sagiv (Discovery of Self-Assembly Monolayers (SAMs)). | [ |
| 1981 | Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer (Invention of Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM)). | [ |
| 1981 | Alexey Ekimov (Discovery of nanocrystalline Quantum Dots in a glass matrix). | [ |
| 1981 | Eric Drexler (Molecular Engineering). | [ |
| 1982 | Nadrian Seeman (Development of the concept of DNA Nanotechnology). | [ |
| 1983 | Louis Brus (Discovery of colloidal Quantum Dots). | [ |
| 1985 | Richard Smalley, Robert Curl and Harold Kroto (Discovery of Buckminsterfullerenes C60). | [ |
| 1986 | Gerd Binnig, Christoph Gerber and Calvin F. Quate (Invention of Atomic Force Microscope (AFM). | [ |
| 1987 | Dimitri Averin and Konstantin Likharev (Single-Electron Tunneling (SET) transistor). | [ |
| 1990 | Donald Eigler and Erhard Schweizer (Arranged of individual Xenon atoms to form the letters IBM). | [ |
| 1991 | Sumio Iijima (Discovery of Multi-wall Carbon nanotubes). | [ |
| 1992 | Charles T. Kresge (Discovery of mesoporous silica MCM-41). | [ |
| 1993 | Sumio Iijima and Donald Bethune (Discovery of Single-wall Carbon nanotubes). | [ |
| 1996 | Chad Mirkin and Robert Letsinger (SAM of DNA+gold colloids). | [ |
| 1997 | Zyvex (First nanotechnology company founded). | [ |
| 1998 | Cees Dekker (Creation of a Transistor using carbon nanotubes). | [ |
| 1999 | Chad Mirkin (Development of Dip-pen Nanolithography (DPN)). | [ |
| 2000 | Mark Hersam and Joseph Lyding (Feedback-Controlled Lithography (FCL). | [ |
| 2000 | President Bill Clinton announces US National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI). | [ |
| 2001 | Carlo Montemagno (Molecular nanomachines: molecular motor (rotor) with nanoscale silicon devices). | [ |
| 2002 | Cees Dekker (Carbon nanotubes functionalized with DNA). | [ |
| 2003 | President George W. Bush signed into law the 21st Century Nanotechnology Research and Development Act. | [ |
| 2003 | Naomi Halas (Development of gold nanoshells). | [ |
| 2004 | Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov (Discovery of graphene). | [ |
| 2004 | Xu et al. (Discovery of Fluorescent Carbon dots). | [ |
| 2005 | James Tour (Nanocar with turning buckyball wheels). | [ |
| 2006 | Paul Rothemund (DNA origami). | [ |
| 2007 | J. Fraser Stoddart (artificial molecular machines: pH-triggered muscle-like). | [ |
| 2008 | Osamu Shimomura, Martin Chalfie and Roger Y. Tsien (Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery and development of the green fluorescent protein, GFP). | [ |
| 2009 | Nadrian Seeman (DNA structures fold into 3D rhombohedral crystals). | [ |
| 2010 | IBM (Development of an ultra-fast lithography to create 3D nanoscale textured surface). | [ |
| 2011 | Leonhard Grill (scanning tunneling microscope (STM) describes the electronic and mechanical properties of individual molecules and the polymer chains). | [ |
| 2016 | Jean-Pierre Sauvage, Sir J. Fraser Stoddart and Bernard L. Feringa (Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the design and synthesis of molecular machines). | [ |
| 2017 | Nobel Prize in Physics 2017: Gravitational waves. | [ |
| 2018 | World’s smallest tic-tac-toe game board made with DNA. | [ |
| 2018 | Shrinking objects to the nanoscale. | [ |