Title: Introduction to Solid State Lighting
1I Nano therefore I am not Is the basis for
nano-education confused? Ian Ferguson Georgia
Institute of Technology 1School of Electrical and
Computer Engineering 2School of Materials Science
and Engineering Faculty Fellow in the Sam Nunn
Security Program Center for International
Strategy, Technology and Policy Atlanta, GA
30332-0250 Email ianf_at_ece.gatech.edu
a
2Where did nano come from?
3Was Moores Law the Driver for Nanotechnology?
The number of transistors that can be
inexpensively placed on an integrated circuit is
increasing exponentially, doubling approximately
every two years. Gordon E. Moore
4Miniaturization continues
5Evolution of CMOS technology, 1960 - 2020
6Decade of Innovations Keeping up with Moores Law
7Timeline
http//www.foresight.org/nano/history.html
- 1959 - Feynman gives after-dinner talk describing
molecular machines building with atomic precision - 1974 - Taniguchi uses term "nano-technology" in
paper on ion-sputter machining - 1977 - Drexler originates molecular
nanotechnology concepts at MIT - 1981 - First technical paper on molecular
engineering to build with atomic precision - STM
invented - 1985 - Buckyball discovered
- 1986 - First book published - AFM invented -
First organization formed - 1987 - First protein engineered - First
university symposium - 1988 - First university course
- 1989 - IBM logo spelled in individual atoms -
First national conference - 1990 - First nanotechnology journal - Japan's
STA begins funding nanotech projects - 1991 - Japan''s MITI announces bottom-up "atom
factory" - IBM endorses bottom-up path -
Japan's MITI commits 200 million - Carbon
nanotube discovered - 1992 - First textbook published - First
Congressional testimony - 1993 - First Feynman Prize in Nanotechnology
awarded - First coverage of nanotech from White
House - "Engines of Creation" book given to Rice
administration, stimulating first university
nanotech - center
- 1994 - Nanosystems textbook used in first
university course - US Science Advisor advocates
nanotechnology
8Timeline cont.
- 1995 - First think tank report - First industry
analysis of military applications - 1996 - 250,000 Feynman Grand Prize announced -
First European conference - NASA begins work in
computational nanotech - First nanobio
conference - 1997 - First company founded Zyvex - First
design of nanorobotic system - 1998 - First NSF forum, held in conjunction with
Foresight Conference - First DNA-based
nanomechanical device - 1999 - First Nanomedicine book published - First
safety guidelines - Congressional hearings on
proposed National Nanotechnology Initiative - 2000 - President Clinton announces U.S. National
Nanotechnology Initiative - First state research
initiative 100 million in California - 2001 - First report on nanotech industry - U.S.
announces first center for military applications - 2002 - First nanotech industry conference -
Regional nanotech efforts multiply - 2003 - Congressional hearings on societal
implications - Call for balancing NNI research
portfolio - Drexler/Smalley debate is published
in Chemical Engineering News - 2004 - First policy conference on advanced
nanotech - First center for nanomechanical
systems - 2005 - At Nanoethics meeting, Roco announces
nanomachine/nanosystem project count has reached
300 - 2006 - National Academies nanotechnology report
calls for experimentation toward molecular - manufacturing
9Controllable dot size and light emission energy
All samples have anti-surfactant
25 nm
10Ground state exciton energy
- Interband optical transition with
- 30 nm of diameter
- Height lt 4.1 nm
- ? Confinement dominant Blue shift
- Height gt 4.1 nm
- ? Piezoelectric effect dominant Red shift
- A fair agreement with experimental data
11Has policy driven the birth of nanotechnology?
- Bomb
- NSF
- Space race
- Nanotechnology
- What are the consequences?
12The perceived scientific method
- Science
- Engineering
- Technology
- Societal Impact
Value perceived by society
13Did the chicken come before the egg?
- Nano-Science
- Nano-Engineering
- Nano-Technology
14The Second WaveNanotechnology is shaping
the world atom-by-atom, the builders final
frontier.
Anything you ca do I can do better!
will influence virtually every man-made object
as well as the prevention, diagnosis and
treatment of disease during the 21st century.
15Policy and Controversy
- http//www.nanotech-now.com/Press_Kit/nanotechnolo
gy-history.htm - Since 2000, awareness of nanotechnology among
environmental activists, regulators, and
lawmakers has been on the rise. Environmental
organizations have expressed fears about the
potential ecological and health consequences of
mainstream nanotechnology, and have called for
increased research into safety of nanoparticles.
The Drexler version of advanced nanotechnology
has also been the subject of public fear, largely
centered on the notion that nanotechnology could
spiral out of control and convert all life on
Earth into "gray goo." Drexler, who originally
introduced this apocalyptic prospect in Engines
of Creation, has since repeatedly distanced
himself from it-but gray goo retains its grip on
the public imagination. There are other serious
reasons to be worried about the development of
nanotechnology, including the risk of severe
economic disruption the possibly dehumanizing
effects of using nanotechnology on ourselves and
the potential criminal, military, or terrorist
use of advanced nanotechnology. A few
organizations are paying full-time attention to
these concerns, including the Foresight Institute
(established in 1986) and the Center for
Responsible Nanotechnology (established in 2002).
Public policy discussions have barely begun to
reflect those long-term concerns. Although some
agencies in the U.S. government have been
involved in nanotechnology since the 1980s,
federal funding of nanotechnology research did
not begin in earnest until the late 1990s. In
2000, the National Nanotechnology Initiative was
established to coordinate the government's work
in nanotechnology soon, federal spending on
nanotechnology is scheduled to cross the 1
billion-per-year mark. Along with the increased
funding has come a government commitment to
investigate the "social, economic, health, and
environmental implications" of nanotechnology. As
public interest continues to grow, and as
scientific progress make advanced nanotechnology
seem ever more attainable, policymakers are
likely to increasingly turn their attentions to
the promise and peril of nanotechnology. 1.
Adapted from Adam Keiper, "The Nanotechnology
Revolution," The New Atlantis, Summer 2003
(www.TheNewAtlantis.com). Updated on 10 August
2004, and used with permission. - http//www.thenewatlantis.com/publications/the-na
notechnology-revolution
16What is the educational basis for nanotechnology
in EE, ECE, etc?
17National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network
(NNIN)
Mission Enable rapid advancements in science,
engineering and technology at the nano-scale by
efficient access to nanotechnology infrastructure
Approach An NSF funded network of shared open
facilities distributed throughout the country
that will enable the full creative abilities of
the nanoscale user community to emerge
18Marcus Nanotechnology Building
- 90M Facility Investment, 67M Equipment
Investment - 190,000 GSF building
- 30,000 GSF cleanroom space50 initial fit-out
- 1/3 organic (biological) cleanroomlife sciences
- 2/3 inorganic (electronic) cleanroomphysical
sciences - 30,000 GSF supporting lab space at full fit-out
(three lab floors) - Base construction complete
- Tool fit-upequipment installation, specialized
utilities, and supporting infrastructure in
progress
19Georgia Tech Education and Outreach in
Nanotechnology
- Georgia Techs education outreach
- programs have seen substantial growth
- since the inception of NNIN
20Georgia Tech Education and Outreach in
Nanotechnology
- Current programs include
- Summer camps
- K-12 school visits (on and off site)
- Teacher workshops
- Technical workshops
- Research Experience for Teachers
- Research Experience for Undergraduates
- New in 2009 Nanooze the Exhibit
- Museum exhibit with 7 interactive stations
- Housed at the NRC beginning in early April
- Free to the public
Nanotechnology Explorations Summer 2008
21Integrating Nanotechnology Education at Georgia
Tech
- Nanotechnology Certificate Program for
undergraduate students - 15-credit program taken over the junior and
senior years - 9 lecture credits, 3 laboratory credits, 3
research credits - Lecture Courses give rigorous and comprehensive
background in NSE - - Nanoscale Chemistry Chemical Processing
- - Nanoscale Physical Properties
Characterization - - Nanoscale Devices (along with demos of
micro/nanoelectronic fab.) - Nanosystems Laboratory is the capstone course
- Additional lectures from invited speakers on
nanoethics, nanotoxicology, nanotechnology
commercialization, and nanotechnology
entrepreneurship -
22Nanosystems Laboratory (under development)
- Set of four experimental and computational
stations - Nanomaterial synthesis and characterization ?
Computational design of - nanodevice fabrication process ?
Implementation of nanodevice fabrication - process ? Characterization of nanodevice
- Tools synthesis reactor, AFM, COMSOL
multiphysics, optical microscope, - impedance spectrometer
- First set of modules on metal oxide (e.g. SnO2)
nanobelt synthesis and devices
Measurement and analysis of electronic
properties upon exposure to gas molecules
Nanobelt synthesis and characterization
Modeling and implementation of dielectrophoretic
nanobelt assembly into a sensor array
23The technology is developing but where are the
jobs
Piezotronics
24NNIN Education
Under construction
25Working in Nanotechnology
26TinyTechJobs
27Discussion points
- If we already own nanotechnology then how can we
take it back - Need a byline EE, ECE, etc. the home of Nano
- Do we want to stress nanotechnology especially if
it looks like if has failed to have societal
impact - In nanotechnology - Materials drive application
- In EE, ECE, etc. - Applications drive materials
- Focus on what is next
28I Nano therefore I am not Is the basis for
nano-education confused? Ian Ferguson Georgia
Institute of Technology School of Electrical and
Computer Engineering School of Materials Science
and Engineering Faculty Fellow in the Sam Nunn
Security Program Center for International
Strategy, Technology and Policy Atlanta, GA
30332-0250 Email ianf_at_ece.gatech.edu
W