The progress of today's science and technology encounters an
increasing demand for finer and more efficiently performing
materials with properties superior over those of current and hence
ageing devices. Whether this is concerned with electronics or drug
delivery, cancer diagnostics or alternative energy sources, the
search for means of miniaturizing the existing materials or
devising fundamentally new components with higher capacities
appears to be relentless. A saving solution to this is widely
proposed as the design and fabrication of nanostructures, molecular
architectures with dimensions featured below 100 nm. Replicating
Nature's designs faithfully reproduced over millions of years
provides perhaps the most straightforward route to success. Nature
offers examples of nanodefined self-assemblies in virtually all
levels of biological organization. However explicit guidance to the
fabrication of functional or specialist nanostructures is of
paramount importance.
Nanotechnology is often referred to as building nanoscale
structures from bottom up. However, while it is visually clear what
is at "up" little is given and understood what is at the "bottom."
This new book gives the notion of and provides rules for building
nanostructures from basics - the very bottom. The main objective of
this publication is to bring together contemporary approaches for
designing nanostructures that employ naturally derived
self-assembling motifs as synthetic platforms.
The book has been written to satisfy the demands that motivate
the search for and principles that prove to help the design of
novel nanostructures. The overall goal is to compile the existing
understanding of rules that govern biomolecular self-assembly into
a practical guide to molecular nanotechnology. It is written in the
shape of a review referenced as fully as permissible within the
context of biomolecular design, which forms a general trend
throughout.
The volume is composed of three core chapters focusing on three
prominent topics of applied nanotechnology where the role of
nanodesign is predominant. The three key areas from which popular
highlights can be drawn are:
-employing the genetic repository, DNA, for creating various
geometric nanoscale objects and patterns
-the empirical pursuit of an artificial virus, a magic bullet in
gene therapy
-designing artificial extracellular matrices for regenerative
medicine
Specific applications that arise from designed nanoscale
assemblies as well as fabrication and characterization techniques
are of secondary importance and whenever they appear serve as
progress and innovation highlights.
The book takes an unconventional approach in delivering material
of this kind. It does not lead straight to applications or methods
as most nanotechnology works tend to do, but instead it focuses on
the initial and primary aspect of "nano" rather than on
"technology." Nanodesign is unique in its own field - illustrations
are essential and the cohort of brilliant bioinspired designs
reported to date form a major part of the publication. In addition,
key bibliographic references are covered as fully as possible. A
special appendix giving a short list of leading world laboratories
engaged in bioinspired nanodesign is also included.
General
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