Title :
Nanopatterns - using network archetypes as an approach to understanding emergence of properties at scale
Author :
Cormia, Robert D. ; Johnsen, Jill N.
Author_Institution :
Foothill Coll., Los Altos Hill, CA, USA
Abstract :
Chemistry and materials science students face a daunting taxonomy of terminology, molecular and crystalline structures, and chemical and physical properties to memorize, organize, and apply. “Emergence of properties at scale” is a foundational concept in nanoscience, yet nothing in nanotechnology curriculum explains how and where specific properties emerge. Through nanotechnology courses and a certificate program, Foothill College is developing a framework that captures emergent network archetype properties. A novel pedagogical approach applies the concept of patterns to nanostructured materials, as a classification means to understand how physical properties emerge from extended networks of atoms and molecules, and the physics of those extended structural networks. From such a foundational understanding, scientists, technicians and engineers will be better informed in “engineering the neighborhood of the atom,” to produce novel materials with unique properties, the working definition of nanotechnology.
Keywords :
educational courses; educational institutions; nanopatterning; nanostructured materials; teaching; Foothill College; certificate program; chemical properties; crystalline structure; daunting taxonomy; nanopatterning; nanostructured materials; nanotechnology; nanotechnology courses; network archetypes; pedagogical approach; physical properties; Chemistry; Lattices; Magnetic properties; Materials; Nanobioscience; Nanostructures; Physics;
Conference_Titel :
Nanotechnology (IEEE-NANO), 2011 11th IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
Portland, OR
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1514-3
Electronic_ISBN :
1944-9399
DOI :
10.1109/NANO.2011.6144573