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Preface
The word “nano” has become very popular throughout
the world and it has brought revolution in the traditional concept
on material dimensions. Nanomaterials are defined as materials that
have dimensional size on a nanometer scale of 1-100 nm and exhibit
distinct physico-chemical properties than bulk materials. Scientists,
to some extent, believe that nanoparticles constitute another state
of matter! Nanostructure materials resolve a number of common problems
associated in the fields of industrial, engineering and biomedical
sciences. These materials are being utilized in various applications
including bio-markers, solar cells, electronic devices, advanced
ceramics, new batteries, engineered catalysts, functional paint
and ink, magnetic resonance imaging, targeted drug delivery, and
lighting technologies, etc. As nanoscale devices have become more
of a commercial reality, the industrialization of nanoscale materials
has been limited by the need for new material compositions and the
development of high-throughput automation for materials preparation.
The formation of nanocrystals is notorious for its complexity and
requires long reaction times, in the order of hours. However, such
large-scale reactions exhibit inhomogeneities in the growth process
by thermal process, which produce poor nucleation and therefore
broaden size distributions. Chemical solution methods have been
widely used to produce nanostructured materials, and can be applied
to achieve monodisperse nanoparticles with controlled size and shape.
There is no general strategy to make nanoparticles with narrow-size
distribution, tailored properties, and desired morphologies, which
could be universally applied to different materials. It is believed
that nanoparticle formation follows the classic LaMer mechanism,
which suggests a short burst of nucleation followed by slow diffusive
growth, favoring formation of nucleation followed by slow diffusive
growth, favoring formation of monodisperse crystalline nanoparticles.
However, the regulation of the size feature, surfaces and interfaces
are crucial components in the synthesis of nanostructured systems.
Each specific synthetic route of nanoparticles dictates their usage
for a particular filed of application. Therefore, identifying novel
methodologies to prepare monodisperse nanoparticles by utilizing
natural resources and those developed products can directly applicable
for bio-medical applications due to no harmful reagents involved
in the preparation processes.
The present book deals with various advanced strategies, such as,
surfactant based synthesis, microemulsion mediated synthesis, self-assembly
process, polymer and hydrogel template synthesis, and natural resources
based synthesis, that have frequently been followed to fabricate
nanostructures of required size and shape, and functionalities to
enable them to be used in a wide spectrum of industrial, biomedical
and technological applications. It is intended to give readers a
clear picture of nanoparticles synthesis by various methodologies
as well as new ideas or suggestions on the creation of novel nanostructure
materials to improve the performance of the advanced functional
nanomaterials.
S.K. Bajpai
Govt. Model Science College
Jabalpur
India
Murali Mohan Yallapu
Sanford Research/USD
Sioux Falls
USA
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