Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Tokyo University of Science. Norio Taniguchi (谷口 紀男, Taniguchi Norio, May 27, 1912 – November 15, 1999) was a professor of Tokyo University of Science. He coined the term nano-technology in 1974 [1] to describe semiconductor processes such as thin film deposition and ion beam milling exhibiting characteristic control on the order of a ...

  2. It is generally acknowledged that the term nanotechnology was first used by the late Professor Norio Taniguchi of the Tokyo Science University in a paper, “On the Basic Concept of...

    • Adarsh Sandhu
    • 2006
  3. Dec 27, 2019 · Nanotechnology is one of the most promising technologies of the 21st century. It is the ability to convert the nanoscience theory to useful applications by observing, measuring, manipulating, assembling, controlling and manufacturing matter at the nanometer scale.

    • Samer Bayda, Muhammad Adeel, Tiziano Tuccinardi, Marco Cordani, Flavio Rizzolio
    • 10.3390/molecules25010112
    • 2019
    • Molecules. 2020 Jan; 25(1): 112.
  4. Japanese scientist Norio Taniguchi of Tokyo University of Science was the first to use the term "nano-technology" in a 1974 conference, to describe semiconductor processes such as thin film deposition and ion beam milling exhibiting characteristic control on the order of a nanometer. His definition was, "'Nano-technology' mainly consists of the ...

  5. The term “nanotechnology” was first coined by Norio Taniguchi, a professor at Tokyo University of Science, in 1974 (Khan and Rizvi, 2014), to describe dimensional accuracy (Taniguchi, 996). The fundamental basis of nanotechnology is making functional materials, devices, and systems on the nanometer length scale.

  6. Nov 26, 2015 · Almost 15 years after Feynman’s lecture, a Japanese scientist, Norio Taniguchi, was the first to use “nanotechnology” to describe semiconductor processes that occurred on the order of a nanometer. He advocated that nanotechnology consisted of the processing, separation, consolidation, and deformation of materials by one atom or one molecule.

  7. People also ask

  8. www.nature.com › articles › s41565/018/0276-yLet there be nano - Nature

    The equivalent of “Let there be nano” was Norio Taniguchi’s 1974 paper in the proceedings of a conference in Tokyo. The title of his paper was “On the basic concept of nano-technology”1 ...

  1. People also search for