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Nanotechnology Innovation (1 Viewer)

L

lucky

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Hi.. ne1 doing nanotechnology innovation coz i wanna do it in UTS next year.. is the course hard and is it difficult to get a job coz its still a "new" course?
 
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tooheyz

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yeah same with me... my 'new course' that i wanna do will be hard to get jobs...

hmmm i dont think i made sense, but anyway...

whats nanotechnology?

is that measurements or something? coz i know nano means really really small units...
 

Huy

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(boring long-winded definition)

Manufactured products are made from atoms. The properties of those products depend on how those atoms are arranged. If we rearrange the atoms in coal we can make diamond. If we rearrange the atoms in sand (and add a few other trace elements) we can make computer chips. If we rearrange the atoms in dirt, water and air we can make potatoes.

Todays manufacturing methods are very crude at the molecular level. Casting, grinding, milling and even lithography move atoms in great thundering statistical herds. It's like trying to make things out of LEGO blocks with boxing gloves on your hands. Yes, you can push the LEGO blocks into great heaps and pile them up, but you can't really snap them together the way you'd like.

In the future, nanotechnology will let us take off the boxing gloves. We'll be able to snap together the fundamental building blocks of nature easily, inexpensively and in most of the ways permitted by the laws of physics. This will be essential if we are to continue the revolution in computer hardware beyond about the next decade, and will also let us fabricate an entire new generation of products that are cleaner, stronger, lighter, and more precise.

It's worth pointing out that the word "nanotechnology" has become very popular and is used to describe many types of research where the characteristic dimensions are less than about 1,000 nanometers. For example, continued improvements in lithography have resulted in line widths that are less than one micron: this work is often called "nanotechnology." Sub-micron lithography is clearly very valuable (ask anyone who uses a computer!) but it is equally clear that lithography will not let us build semiconductor devices in which individual dopant atoms are located at specific lattice sites.

Many of the exponentially improving trends in computer hardware capability have remained steady for the last 50 years. There is fairly widespread belief that these trends are likely to continue for at least another several years, but then lithography starts to reach its fundamental limits.

If we are to continue these trends we will have to develop a new "post-lithographic" manufacturing technology which will let us inexpensively build computer systems with mole quantities of logic elements that are molecular in both size and precision and are interconnected in complex and highly idiosyncratic patterns. Nanotechnology will let us do this.

When it's unclear from the context whether we're using the specific definition of "nanotechnology" (given here) or the broader and more inclusive definition (often used in the literature), we'll use the terms "molecular nanotechnology" or "molecular manufacturing."

Whatever we call it, it should let us

* Get essentially every atom in the right place.
* Make almost any structure consistent with the laws of physics that we can specify in molecular detail.
* Have manufacturing costs not greatly exceeding the cost of the required raw materials and energy.
:)

Originally posted by ToOhEyZ
coz i know nano means really really small units...
one billionth, or 1.00 x 10^-9
 
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tooheyz

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oh my jod huy... i read the first paragraph and i couldnt b bothered.. LOL

hmm so its based on atoms?
 

Huy

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Originally posted by ToOhEyZ
oh my jod huy... i read the first paragraph and i couldnt b bothered.. LOL

hmm so its based on atoms?
come on, it wasn't that long... skim read it if you have to, or read the bold statements and italicised (last) bit. :)

it's the manipulation of atoms, yes.
 
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i think its something to do with nanomachines...the little machines they shoot up old people's asses to clean their pipes!
hehehe *cheezy grin*
 
L

lucky

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hmm.. alrighties then... so does ne1 do nanotechnology innovation in UTS ?

btw... like ur copy and paste huy... lol..
 

Huy

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Originally posted by lucky
btw... like ur copy and paste huy... lol..
Thanks, but I didn't claim it was mine, nor did I take credit for it.

See the intended purpose of replying to Tooheyz's post, she wanted to know, I gave her answers, she could have looked it up herself, but maybe BOS was faster? :)
 

johnson

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mate i don't get why you needed to explain why you wrote your post :rolleyes:
 

Huy

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LOL.

Good point johnson.

but lucky here was trying to point out that "somehow" i tried to fool you guys into thinking that i was some sort of "nanotechnology king" or something... lol :)
 

toisthbe

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so u'll be called an nanotechnician when u finish the course?
wat a title..!

"hey what do u for a living?", toisthbe asks,
"oh i'm an accountant, u..?", responds some guy,

"i'm a.. NANOTECHNICIAN..hahaHAahAHAHA!!" shouts toisthbe.
 

G[aNBa]Tte!!

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i'm thinking of doing nanotech. too...is it difficult to find employment?

i'm not doing any science courses, how difficult is it to catch up by tdoing the bridging course?
 

windows xp

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Nanotechnology: To work on and be pay for do stuff in things that you will ever see in your life and doubt of their existance but you feign that exist.
 

windows xp

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Originally posted by G[aNBa]Tte!!
i'm thinking of doing nanotech. too...is it difficult to find employment?
The reality is that I want to do the course but have no idea what to work on after I graduate if I ever select that course. I don't think there are many jobs that require nanotechnology here in Australia. Maybe in US you might find more. I think that in japan or China you have more possibilities of getting job as they produce a lot of computer stuff and as the computer chips are always getting smaller and smaller, they need more nanotechnology people. Hopefully within 4 years there will be jobs for people who study nano in Australia.
 

adinclik

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nanotech. innovation

i looked up the course outline for nanotech innovation and i believe its like doing half a nanotech course and half a busines course, so it feels like u dont get to advance in aany of them.
 

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Good grief, I thought someone had started a new thread without checking out the old ones first...then I saw Huy!

Anyway, similar questions answered by me (nano student) here: http://www.boredofstudies.org/community/showthread.php?goto=newpost&t=41226

The innovation course is worth about two years science and one year business/IT spread evenly throughout the course, giving an entrepreneurial edge to Nanotechnologists (not "nanotechnician", that's something else). It basically means you're better prepared to start a nanotechnology company.
 

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