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31st World Nano Conference , will be organized around the theme “Scrutinizing the latest approaches in the sphere of Nanotechnology”

Nano 2020 is comprised of 22 tracks and 134 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in Nano 2020.

Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.

Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.

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\r\n Since the outbreak began in late 2019, researchers have been racing to learn more about SARS-CoV-2, which is a strain from a family of viruses known as coronavirus for their crown-like shape.

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\r\n North-eastern chemical engineer Thomas Webster, who specializes in developing nano-scale medicine and technology to treat diseases, is part of a contingency of scientists that are contributing ideas and technology to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention to fight the COVID-19 outbreak.

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\r\n The idea of using nanoparticles, Webster says, is that the virus behind COVID-19 consists of a structure of a similar scale as his nanoparticles. At that scale, matter is ultra-small, about ten thousand times smaller than the width of a single strand of hair.

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\r\n   Webster is proposing particles of similar sizes that could attach to SARS-CoV-2 viruses, disrupting their structure with a combination of infrared light treatment. That structural change would then halt the ability of the virus to survive and reproduce in the body.

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The association of nanoparticles in a thin film shape is routinely essential to render these utilitarian and operational. Two basic engineered techniques. One is high-temperature warm breaking down and second is liquid interface reaction, sensible for arranging motion pictures of various metal and metal oxide nanoparticles. Besides, the utilization of a high-essentialness ball handling and begin plasma sintering process for the game plan and planning of nanocomposite powders into mass magnets are also featured.

 

  • Track 2-1Applications of Nano materials and Devices
  • Track 2-2Microscopy and Spectroscopic Methods of Measurement at the Nanoscale
  • Track 2-3Nanomaterials manufacturing technologies
  • Track 2-4Size Dependence of Properties
  • Track 2-5Nano Particles
  • Track 2-6Characterization and Optical Properties of Silver Nanostructures
  • Track 2-7Materiomics

Nanoscience and technology is the branch of science. It studies systems and manipulates matter on atomic, molecular and supramolecular scales. Nano means one billion of a unit of measure. Nanotechnology has a huge potential to provide technological solutions to many problems in science, energy, physics, environment al and medical fields.

 

  • Track 3-1Emerging Trends in Nanotechnology
  • Track 3-2Energy Conversion and Storage
  • Track 3-3Nanotechnology in Water Purification
  • Track 3-4Food, Smart Agriculture, and Medicine
  • Track 3-5Nanostructured Metals: Manufacturing and Modelling
  • Track 3-6Nanospinitronics
  • Track 3-7Quantum Field Model for Graphene Magnetism

Materials science is a discipline which deals with the discovery and design of new substances. Materials sciences have played a key role for the development of mankind. The intellectual origins of materials science stem from the Enlightenment, when researchers began to use analytical thinking from chemistry, physics, and engineering to understand ancient, phenomenological observations in metallurgy and mineralogy. Materials Science and Engeneering inspects how variations in the structure of a material impact its properties.

 

  • Track 4-1Engineering approach for elastic-plastic fracture analysis in materials
  • Track 4-2New frontiers in Materials Science by Ionic liquids
  • Track 4-3Engineering applications of materials
  • Track 4-4Computational Materials Science
  • Track 4-5Global materials science market
  • Track 4-6Regulation On Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products/ Tissue Engineering
  • Track 4-7Quantum Physics

Various geophysical and social weights are changing a move from fossil energizes to renewable and managable vitality sources. To impact this progressions, we should make the materials that will bolster developing vitality advancements.

 

  • Track 5-1Nanomaterials for Clean and Sustainable Technology
  • Track 5-2Energy Storage and Novel Generation
  • Track 5-3Nanomaterials for building and construction
  • Track 5-4Environment, human health, and safety issues of nanotechnology
  • Track 5-5Renewable Energy Technologies
  • Track 5-6Green Chemistry and Materials
  • Track 5-7Smart Grid
  • Track 5-8Energy and environment relevant nanotechnology

Nanomaterials are characterized as materials of which a solitary unit is measured 1 and 1000 nanometers yet is generally 1—100 nm. Nanoparticles are items with each of the three outside measurements at the nanoscale. Nanoparticles that are normally happening (e.g., volcanic powder, ash from woodland fires) or are the accidental side effects of ignition procedures (e.g., welding, diesel motors) are generally physically and synthetically heterogeneous and frequently termed ultrafine particles.

 

  • Track 6-1AB initio Microdynamic Approaches for Nanomaterials Simulation
  • Track 6-2Soft Nanotechnology and Colloids
  • Track 6-3Semiconductors, Metals, Ceramics, Polymers
  • Track 6-4Gold Nanoparticles and Biosensors
  • Track 6-5Thin Film and Nanostructured Multiferroic Materials
  • Track 6-6ZnO Nanostructures for Optoelectronic Applications
  • Track 6-7Emerging Multifunctional Nanomaterials for Solar Energy Extraction
  • Track 6-8Novel Magnetic-Carbon Biocomposites

Nano Medicine is the application of tiny machines to the treatment and prevention of disease. Nano Medicine the application of technology to do everything from drug delivery to repairing of cells. Nano robots are advancements in Nano medicine. Functionalities of Nanomedicine can be added to nanomaterials by interfacing them with biological molecules or structures.

 

  • Track 7-1Drug Delivery
  • Track 7-2Nanomedicine in Theranostics
  • Track 7-3Personalized Nanomedicine
  • Track 7-4Cancer Treatment
  • Track 7-5Dentifrobots
  • Track 7-6Medical Devices
  • Track 7-7Blood Purification
  • Track 7-8Biocompatibility

Nanotechnology refers to a broad range of tools, techniques and applications that simply involve particles on the approximate size scale of a few to hundreds of nanometers in diameter. Particles of this size have some unique physicochemical and surface properties that lend themselves to novel uses. Indeed, advocates of nanotechnology suggest that this area of research could contribute to solutions for some of the major problems we face on the global scale such as ensuring a supply of safe drinking water for a growing population, as well as addressing issues in medicine, energy, and agriculture.

 

  • Track 8-1Nanomaterials and water filtration
  • Track 8-2Nanotechnologies for water remediation
  • Track 8-3Bioactive nanoparticles for water disinfections
  • Track 8-4Self-assembled monolayer on mesoporous supports (SAMMS)
  • Track 8-5Nanoscale semiconductor photocatalysts
  • Track 8-6Bimetallic iron nanoparticles

Bionanotechnology is the term that refers to the juncture of nanotechnology and biology. This discipline aids to indicate the fusion of biological research with several fields of nanotechnology. Concepts that are improved through nanobiology are comprises with Nano scale, nanodevices , and nanoparticles phenomena that occurs within the discipline of nanotechnology.

  • Track 9-1Bioluminescent magnetic nanoparticles
  • Track 9-2Surface modified polystyrene nanoparticles
  • Track 9-3Nano systems
  • Track 9-4Target specific drug delivery
  • Track 9-5Disease diagnosis

Tissue engineering is the use of a grouping of cells, engineering and materials methods, and appropriate biochemical and physicochemical factors to increase or replace biological tissues. Tissue engineering includes the use of a scaffold for the creation of innovative viable tissue for a medical determination. While it was once characterized as a sub-field of biomaterials, having developed in scope and importance and it can be considered as a field in its own.

  • Track 10-1Tissue Engineering
  • Track 10-2Nanotechnology and Tissue Engineering
  • Track 10-3Applications of Nanotechnology In Stem Cell Research
  • Track 10-4Nano biotechnology: From Stem Cell, Tissue Engineering to Cancer Research
  • Track 10-5Regulation on Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products/ Tissue Engineering

Graphene is an atomic-scale honeycomb lattice made of carbon atoms. Graphene is undoubtedly emerging as one of the most promising nanomaterials because of its unique combination of superb properties, which opens a way for its exploitation in a wide spectrum of applications ranging from electronics to optics, sensors, and biodevices.

  • Track 11-1Chemistry and biology studies of graphene
  • Track 11-2Graphene modification and functionalization
  • Track 11-3Graphene Synthesis
  • Track 11-4Large scale graphene production and characterization
  • Track 11-5Applications of graphene in energy
  • Track 11-6Applications of graphene in biomedical
  • Track 11-7Graphene Companies and Market

Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are allotropes of carbon with a cylindrical nanostructure. These cylindrical carbon molecules have unusual properties, which are valuable for nanotechnology, electronics, optics and other fields of materials science and technology. Owing to the material's exceptional strength and stiffness, nanotubes have been constructed with length-to-diameter ratio of up to 132,000,000:1, significantly larger than for any other material. In addition, owing to their extraordinary thermal conductivity, mechanical, and electrical properties, carbon nanotubes find applications as additives to various structural materials. For instance, nanotubes form a tiny portion of the material(s) in some (primarily carbon fibre) baseball bats, golf clubs, car parts or Damascus steel.

  • Track 12-1Properties of carbon nanotubes
  • Track 12-2Carbon nanotube chemistry
  • Track 12-3Types of carbon nanotubes and related structures
  • Track 12-4Synthesis, growth mechanism and processing of carbon nanotubes
  • Track 12-5Solid-state formation of carbon nanotubes
  • Track 12-6Commercialisation and Exploitation of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
  • Track 12-7Functionalization and applications of [60] fullerene
  • Track 12-8Biological activity of pristine fullerene C60
  • Track 12-9Carbon nanotechnology to Bio nanotechnology
  • Track 12-10Separation of metallic and semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes

Nano electronics holds few answers for how we might increase the capabilities of electronics devices when we reduce their weight and power consumption. Nano electronics and technology are widely used in all aspects of modern life. Life Safety, Healthcare, Transportation, Computing, Energy and Telecommunications are some of the major fields benefiting from the growth of Nano electronic applications.

  • Track 13-1Nanomaterials Electronics
  • Track 13-2Molecular Electronics
  • Track 13-3Nanoionics
  • Track 13-4Nanoelectronic Devices
  • Track 13-5Magnetoresistive Random Access Memory (MRAM)
  • Track 13-6Flexible Electronic circuits
  • Track 13-7Magnetoelectric Random Access Memory (MeRAM)

Nanostructured Materials for Biomedical Applications serves as a unique source for the rapidly growing biomaterials community on topics at the interface of biomaterials and nanotechnology. The book covers an extensive range of topics related to the processing, characterization, modeling, and applications of nanostructured medical device materials and biological materials.

  • Track 14-1Hierarchical Organisation in Biological Systems
  • Track 14-2Commercialisation and Exploitation of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
  • Track 14-3Classes of Nanostructured Biomaterials
  • Track 14-4Types of Nanostructured Biomaterials
  • Track 14-5Processing and Characterization of Nanostructured Biomaterials
  • Track 14-6Biomedical Applications and Translational Aspects of Nanomaterials

Nanotoxicology is the combinational study of the toxicity of nanomaterials.  Due to quantum size effects and large surface area to volume ratio, nanomaterials have distinct properties compared with their larger counterparts. Nanotoxicology is a branch of bionanoscience which includes the study and application of toxicity of nanomaterials. Nanomaterials, even when prepared of inert elements like gold, become highly active at nanometer dimensions. Nanotoxicological studies are planned to determine whether and to what level these properties may pose a risk to the environment and to human beings.  For example, Diesel nanoparticles have been studied to harm the cardiovascular system in a mouse model.

  • Track 15-1Toxicity of Nanomaterials
  • Track 15-2Genotoxicity
  • Track 15-3Ecotoxicology
  • Track 15-4Cytotoxicity
  • Track 15-5Immunotoxicity
  • Track 15-6Occupational Toxicology
  • Track 15-7Medical Toxicology
  • Track 15-8Tolerogenic Nanoparticles
  • Track 15-9Complications with Nanotoxicity Studies

Nano photonics is where photonics merges with Nano science and nanotechnology, and where spatial confinement considerably modifies light propagation and light-matter interaction.

  • Track 16-1General Introduction
  • Track 16-2Review of Fundamentals of Lasers
  • Track 16-3Optical Devices
  • Track 16-4Description of Light as an Electromagnetic Wave
  • Track 16-5Quantum Aspect of Light
  • Track 16-6Definition of Photon
  • Track 16-7Active Materials Bulk, Quantum Well, Wire Dot and Quantum Dot

Nanoengineering is the practice of engineering on the nanoscale. It derives its name from the nanometre, a unit of measurement equalling one billionth of a meter. Nanoengineering is largely a synonym for nanotechnology, but emphasizes the engineering rather than the pure science aspects of the field.

  • Track 17-1Branches of nanotechnology
  • Track 17-2Risks of nanotechnology
  • Track 17-3Applications of nanotechnology
  • Track 17-4Notable figures in nanotechnology

Nanofluidics is the study of the behavior, manipulation, and control of fluids that are confined to structures of nanometer (typically 1–100 nm) characteristic dimensions (1 nm = 10−9 m). Fluids confined in these structures exhibit physical behaviors not observed in larger structures, such as those of micrometer dimensions and above, because the characteristic physical scaling lengths of the fluid, (e.g. Debye length, hydrodynamic radius) very closely coincide with the dimensions of the nanostructure itself.

  • Track 18-1Nanofluidic circuitry
  • Track 18-2Nanofluidic structures
  • Track 18-3Tuneable Microlens Array
  • Track 18-4Membrane Science
  • Track 18-5Microfluidic cell sorting and Analysis
  • Track 18-6Nanofluidic Devices for DNA Analysis

Nanocomposite is a multiphase solid material where one of the phases has one, two or three dimensions of less than 100 nanometers (nm), or structures having nano-scale repeat distances between the different phases that make up the material. In the broadest sense this definition can include porous media, colloids, gels and copolymers, but is more usually taken to mean the solid combination of a bulk matrix and nano-dimensional phases differing in properties due to dissimilarities in structure and chemistry. The mechanical, electrical, thermal, optical, electrochemical, catalytic properties of the nanocomposite will differ markedly from that of the component materials. Size limits for these effects have been proposed, <5 nm for catalytic activity, <20 nm for making a hard magnetic material soft, <50 nm for refractive index changes, and <100 nm for achieving super paramagnetism, mechanical strengthening or restricting matrix dislocation movement.

  • Track 19-1Superparamagnetism
  • Track 19-2Ceramic Matrix Nanocomposites
  • Track 19-3Composite Materials
  • Track 19-4Metal Matrix Nanocomposites
  • Track 19-5Polymer Matrix Nanocomposites

Nanotechnology is a powerful tool for combating cancer and is being put to use in other applications that may reduce pollution, energy consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and help prevent diseases. NCI's Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer is working to ensure that nanotechnologies for cancer applications are developed responsibly.  As with any new technology, the safety of nanotechnology is continuously being tested. The small size, high reactivity, and unique tensile and magnetic properties of nanomaterials—the same properties that drive interest in their biomedical and industrial applications—have raised concerns about implications for the environment, health, and safety (EHS).

  • Track 20-1Risk Assessment and Management
  • Track 20-2Health Impact of Nanotechnology
  • Track 20-3Societal Impact of Nanotechnology
  • Track 20-4Environmental Impact of Nanotechnology
  • Track 20-5Regulation of Nanotechnology

Development of Nanotechnology and creating of Nanomaterials opened new perspectives for a number of areas of industry. These materials explain enlarged strength, toughness, biocompatibility, and can ensure higher service properties, reliability and systems.

  • Track 21-1Multiscale Modelling for the Materials Improvement and Design
  • Track 21-2Nanostructured Multiphase Alloys
  • Track 21-3Quantum Mechanics for Modelling of Nanomaterials
  • Track 21-4Microstructure-based Models and Dislocation Analysis
  • Track 21-5Mechanics of Nanomaterials
  • Track 21-6Software for Modelling of Nanomaterials
  • Track 21-7Industrial Applications of Nanomaterials Modelling

The fate of nanotechnology has been a subject of various legitimate and non-logical speculations, consolidating a couple of doomsday dreams in popular culture that foreseen self-reproducing nanoparticles taking an interest in tremendous strikes on mankind and nature. The further developed dreams of nanotechnology fuse on one hand the envisioned usage of nano-particles inside the body and the course framework (for decisive and accommodating purposes), and afterward again – potential improvement of new weapons of mass obliteration enabled by nanotechnology.