Foreword, Senators Joseph Lieberman and George
Allen xi
Preface xii
Acknowledgments xvii
About the Author xix
Contributors xxiSection One: Development
Drivers 1Chapter 1: Lessons in Innovation and
Commercialization from the Biotechnology Revolution, Gerald
Gallwas 3Chapter 2:
Nanotechnology and Our Energy Challenge, Richard
Smalley 13Chapter 3: Fads and
Hype in Technology: The Sargasso Sea of "Some Day Soon," Peter
Coffee 19Section Two: The
Players 31Chapter 4: Nanotechnology
Commercialization: Transcending Moore's Law with Molecular
Electronics and Nanotechnology,Steve
Jurvetson 33Chapter 5: Investment in
Nanotechnology, Daniel V. Leff and R. Douglas
Moffat 57Chapter 6: The Role of the U.S.
Government in Nanoscale Science and Technology, Geoffrey M.
Holdridge 63Chapter 7: Overview of U.S. Academic
Research, Julie Chen 77Chapter 8: Understanding
University Technology Transfer for Nanotechnology, Larry Gilbert
and Michael Krieger 91Chapter 9: Intellectual
Property Policy and Impact, Chinh H. Pham and Charles
Berman 105Chapter 10: Entrepreneurs in the
Technological Ecosystem, Jeff Lawrence and Larry
Bock 117Chapter 11: Major Corporations:
Technology, Business, and the Culture of Opportunity, Jim
Duncan 129Chapter 12: Nanotechnology in Federal
Labs, Meyya Meyyappan 135Section Three: Materials
and Industries 139Chapter 13: Nanoscale Materials,
Mark Reed, Sheryl Ehrman, Brent Segal, Zhong Lin Wang, and Fiona
Case 141Chapter 14: Nanotechnology-Enabled
Sensors: Possibilities, Realities, and Diverse Applications, David
J. Nagel and Sharon Smith 163Chapter 15:
Microelectronics, George Thompson, Stephen Goodnick, and Axel
Scherer 177Chapter 16: Drug Delivery, Jianjun
Cheng and Suzie Hwang Pun 197Chapter 17:
Bio-Nano-Information Fusion,Chih-Ming Ho, Dean Ho, and Dan
Garcia 209Section Four: Convergence and
Integration 223Chapter 18: Convergence and
Integration, Mihail C. Roco 225Chapter 19:
Ethical Considerations in the Advance of Nanotechnology, William
Sims
Bainbridge 233Epilogue 243Foreword
to Chapter 20,Michael Kreiger 243Chapter 20:
Infinitesimal Machinery, Richard
Feynman 247Acronyms and
Abbreviations 269
Index 273
Inside the Emerging Multibillion-Dollar Nanotechnology Industry
Suddenly, nanotechnology isn't science fiction or mere theory: It's becoming one of the world's fastest-growing, highest-impact industries. In Nanotechnology: Science, Innovation, and Opportunity, the field's leading experts offer an up-to-the-minute briefing on where the industry stands now, how it will unfold over the coming decade, and how it will impact you.
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Contributors:
Foreword by Senators Joseph Lieberman and George Allen
1. Lessons in Innovation and Commercialization from the Biotechnology Revolution:
Gerald Gallwas, Beckman Instruments
2. Nanotechnology and Our Energy Challenge: Dr. Richard Smalley, Rice University
3. Fads & Hype in Technology: The Sargasso Sea of `Some Day Soon’: Peter Coffee, eWeek
4. Nanotechnology Commercialization: Steve Jurvetson, Draper Fisher Jurvetson
5. Investment in Nanotechnology: Dr. Daniel Leff, Harris & Harris Doug Moffat, Moffat Capital
6. Role of the U.S. Government in Nanoscale Science and Technology: Geoff Holdridge, National 7. Nanotechnology Coordination Office and WTEC, Inc.
8. Overview of US Academic Research: Dr. Julie Chen, University of Massachusetts Lowell
9. Understanding University Technology Transfer for Nanotechnology: Larry Gilbert, Caltech, Dr. Michael Krieger, UCLA
10. Intellectual Property Policy and Impact: Chinh Pham, Greenberg Traurig, Charles Berman, Greenberg Traurig
11. Entrepreneurs: Jeff Lawrence, Trillium Digital Systems, Larry Bock, Nanosys
12. Major Corporations: Technology, Business and the Culture of Opportunity: Jim Duncan, Meggitt PLC
13. Nanotechnology in Federal Laboratories: Dr. Meyya Meyyapan, NASA Ames Laboratory
14. Nanoscale Materials: Dr. Mark Reed, Yale, Dr. ZL Wang, Georgia Tech, Dr. Brent Segal, Nantero Dr. Sheryl Ehrman, Maryland, Fiona Case, Case Scientific
15. Nanotechnology-Enabled Sensors: Dr. David Nagel, George Washington University, Dr. Sharon Smith, Lockheed Martin Microelectronics, Dr. Stephen Goodnick, Arizona State, Dr. George Thompson, Intel, Dr. Axel Scherer, Caltech
16. Drug Delivery: Dr. Suzie Pun, University of Washington, Dr. JJ Cheng, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
17. Bio-Nano-Information Fusion: Dr. Chih-Ming Ho, UCLA, Dr. Dean Ho, UCLA, Dan Garcia, UCLA
18. Convergence and Integration: Dr. Mike Roco, National Science Foundation
19. Ethical Considerations in the advance of Nanotechnology, Dr. Bill Bainbridge, National Science Foundation
20. Infinitesimal Machinery: Dr. Richard Feynman, Caltech
Lynn E. Foster is the Emerging Technologies Director of the international law firm Greenberg Traurig, LLP. He authored the first trade study on nanotechnology and has organized numerous nanotechnology conferences and trade missions. Prior to joining Greenberg Traurig, Mr. Foster held technology industry positions in corporate, entrepreneurial, and government settings. He serves on advisory boards for the Nano Science & Technology Institute and the International Engineering Consortium, as well as the Executive Committee of the Caltech Enterprise Forum.
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