Nanotechnology: Opportunities and Impacts of a Scientific … · 2006-09-05 · U. S. DEPARTMENT OF...

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Nanotechnology: Opportunities and Impacts of a Scientific Revolution National Conference of State Legislatures Nashville, Tennessee August 16, 2006 James B. Roberto Deputy Director for Science and Technology Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge, Tennessee

Transcript of Nanotechnology: Opportunities and Impacts of a Scientific … · 2006-09-05 · U. S. DEPARTMENT OF...

Nanotechnology:Opportunities and Impactsof a Scientific Revolution

National Conference of State LegislaturesNashville, TennesseeAugust 16, 2006

James B. RobertoDeputy Director for Science and TechnologyOak Ridge National LaboratoryOak Ridge, Tennessee

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

Nanotechnology: Opportunities andimpacts of a scientific revolution

• What is nanotechnology?

• The tools of nanotechnology

• Nanotech in the 21st Century

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

Feynman’s vision:“There’s plenty of room at the bottom”

• Why can’t we manipulatematerials atom by atom?

• Why can’t we controlthe synthesis ofindividual molecules?

• Why can’t we writeall of human knowledgeon the head of a pin?

• Why can’t we build machines toaccomplish these things?

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

Nature’s benchmarks

• DNA (50 atoms per bitof information)

• Molecular motors

• The human brain

! 100 trillion (1014)connections

! a million billion (1015) bitsof memory

! a million billion (1015)calculations per second

• Self-assembledcomposites (shells)

Dinosaur claw

Abalone shell

DNA

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

What is nanoscience

• A revolution in the way we lookat the physical world

• Allows the study of materialsat length scales whereproperties are determined

• Addresses materials behaviorat dimensions of 1-100 nm! Properties depend on size

(small is different)

! New and unexpected phenomena

! Requires atom-by-atom assembly

Interactions of proteinmolecules

Natural methane storagein clathrate molecules

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

• New tools for atomic-scale characterization

• New capabilities for single atom/molecule manipulation

• Computational access to large systems of atomsand long time scales

Why now?

DOE’s firstnanoscience center

World’s foremostneutron science center

Leadership-classcomputing

Oak Ridge National Laboratory is investing $2Bin world-class nanotech tools

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

World-class capabilities for nanotechnology at ORNL

The Spallation Neutron Source

• Nation’s largest civilian science project

• $1.4B in buildings and equipment

• World’s most powerful pulsed neutron source

• Nanoscale structure and dynamics of materialsand biological systems

• 1500-2000 scientific users annually

First neutrons

produced

April 28, 2006

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

World-class capabilities for nanotechnology at ORNL

The Center for NanophaseMaterials Sciences

• DOE’s first nanoscience center

• $65M in buildings and equipment

• State-of-the-art synthesis and characterization ofnanoscale materials and structures

• Available to universities and industry basedon competitive peer review

The CNMS is located nextto the Spallation Neutron Source

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

World-class capabilities for nanotechnology at ORNL

Leadership-class computing• Large-scale simulation

needed to predict materialsproperties and trends

• We are building the world’smost powerful computer forscientific research

• Predicting new materialsrather than explainingexisting ones

Designinginnovative

nanomaterials

Understandingmicrobial molecularand cellular systems

Building to 1 petaflop by 2008

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

The promise of nanotechnology

! More powerfulcomputers

! New materials 100times as strong ascurrent materials

! New approaches formedical diagnosis andtreatment

! New catalysts forcleaner, more efficientchemical and energyindustries

! New technologies forenergy production andconversion

! Fast chemical analyses

Metabolism of Celluloseby Enzymes

Molecular switches

DNA delivery

Magnetic nanoclusters

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

• Leverage $2 billionof new nano facilities

• Connect with world-classresearchers

• Access patented technology

• Plant the seedof a new business

• Recruit nano companiesand grow our own

• Build a pipeline of new talent

! Scientists and entrepreneurs

• Establish a Southern Alliancefor Nanotechnology

• Create a nano commercializationfacility to leverage existing researchfacilities

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OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

Nanotechnology in the 21st Century

• Dramatic advances at the frontiers of physics,chemistry, materials sciences, and biology

• New products and services for medicine, materials,information technology, energy, environment,biotechnology, and national security

• Broad engagement of the publicto address societal implications

Nanoscience will change the natureof almost every human-made objectin the next century.

National Science and Technology Council, 2000