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What is nanotechnology? - YouTube
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What is nanotechnology, and why should you care?
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Before we get too technical, try this:
Pick up something that's close to you - anything.
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It might be a glass. Or a smartphone. Or even a tee shirt - it doesn't really matter what.
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Now, think about what this thing does well.
It could be holding water. Or chasing Pokemon.
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Or if you're thinking about that tee-shirt,
making you feel awesome!
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Then think about what it doesn't do so well.
Perhaps smashing when you drop it.
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Or running out of power, just when you need it.
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Or, thinking about that tee shirt still, smelling
of BO after you've worn it for a couple of days.
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It might not be obvious, but all of these
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things - the good stuff and the bad - depend
on the individual atoms that make up the things
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around us. And importantly, how they're put together.
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It's a bit like a car working because of how all the individual bits are arranged.
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It's not just a case of having four wheels,
an engine and a steering wheel. They all have
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to be in the right place if you want a car
that gets you to where you're going,
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without falling apart.
Of course, atoms are a bit smaller than the
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wheels on a car. But the same idea holds.
How the different atoms in something are arranged
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can affect things like, how strong or how
weak it is. Or if it conducts electricity.
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Or if you can see through it. Or even what
it feels like.
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In fact, pretty much anything that the stuff
around you does, it does because of how all
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the different atoms it's made of are put together.
And this includes the things that you don't
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want stuff to do, like breaking, or smelling,
or running out of power.
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If we were really smart of course, we'd make
the stuff around us work better, simply by
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doing a better job of arranging the different atoms it's made of.
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And if we were smarter still, we could make
totally new stuff by putting atoms together
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in ways that we've never done before.
We could even start to create stuff that behaves
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in quite unusual ways, because when you start
playing around with atoms, you can tap into
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some really weird quantum physics.
The trouble is, atoms are really small - more
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than a million times smaller than the tip
of your pinkie finger.
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And that means they're not that easy to work
with.
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But over the past few years, scientists and
engineers have become increasingly good at
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designing and engineering materials down at
the level of atoms, or small groups of atoms.
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And because this new technology involves doing
stuff at such a minute scale, it's called
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nanotechnology.
Using their news skills, nanotechnologists
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are beginning to cool stuff like creating
materials that are really good at turning
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sunlight into energy.
Or using nanoscopically small particles to
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deliver anti-cancer drugs.
Or even turning polluted water into drinkable water.
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They're even finding new ways to make glass
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that doesn't break when you drop it.
Batteries that last longer.
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And even tee shirts that smell fresh
after you've worn them for a few days.
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This is really powerful tech.
It's helping us to do stuff we couldn't even
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dream of just a few years ago.
But because nanotechnology is so powerful,
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we need to be really careful how we use it
- just in case we end up causing more problems
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than we solve.
The last thing we want is to make better solar
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cells that also destroy the environment.
Or design more efficient water filters that
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just happen to cause more pollution.
Because of this, scientists and others are
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working hard to make sure we develop and use
nanotechnology responsibly.
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But this isn't just down to nanotechnologists.
It's something everyone can be part of.
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Because, at the end of the day, it's up to
us to decide just how much we want nanotechnology
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enabled products.
And what we're willing to put up with to get them
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