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What is Nanoscale?

Definition of Nanoscale

  • The nanoscale refers to the size range from 1 nanometer (nm) to 100 nanometers (nm).

  • At this scale, materials behave very differently compared to their bulk (larger) form.

  • This is the scale where atoms and molecules interact and where nanotechnology operates.

 1 nanometer (nm) = 1 billionth of a meter (10⁻⁹ m).
 Nanoscale = 1 nm to 100 nm.

 Why Nanoscale is Special?

At the nanoscale, materials show unique properties due to:

  1. High surface area-to-volume ratio → More reactivity.

  2. Quantum effects → Different color, strength, and conductivity.

Example:

  • Gold in bulk is yellow, but gold nanoparticles can look red or purple.

  • Carbon as graphite is soft, but as carbon nanotubes at nanoscale it becomes stronger than steel.

 Examples of Nanoscale

  • DNA molecule width → ~2 nm

  • Virus size → 20–300 nm

  • Red blood cell → ~7,000 nm (so bigger than nanoscale)

  • Human hair → 80,000–100,000 nm (much larger than nanoscale)

 Applications of Nanoscale

  1. Medicine – Drug delivery at nanoscale to target specific cells.

  2. Electronics – Chips and transistors made at 5 nm or 3 nm.

  3. Energy – Solar cells and batteries improved with nanomaterials.

  4. Environment – Nanoscale filters clean water and air.

  5. Everyday life – Sunscreens, scratch-resistant glass, stain-proof fabrics.

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