Nanotechnology is a developing field.There are lotof career opertunities in nanotechnology.The following list of sites will help you.
Working In Nanotechnology
tinytechjobs
Nanoguys
Nanotechnology Jobs-azonano.com
Nanotechnology Jobs for PhDs


Atomistix Virtual NanoLab (VNL) is a commercial point-and-click software for simulation and analysis of physical and chemical properties of nanoscale devices. Virtual NanoLab is developed and sold commercially by QuantumWise  A/S.

Features

With its graphical interface, Virtual NanoLab provides a user-friendly approach to atomic-scale modeling. The software contains a set of interactive instruments that allows the user to design nanosystems, to set up and execute numerical calculations, and to visualize the results. Samples such as molecules, nanotubes, crystalline systems, and two-probe systems (i.e. a nanostructure coupled to two electrodes) are built with a few mouse clicks.

Virtual NanoLab contains a 3D visualization tool, the Nanoscope, where atomic geometries and computed results can be viewed and analyzed. One can for example plot Bloch functions of nanotubes and crystals, molecular orbitals, electron densities, and effective potentials. The numerical engine that carries out the actual simulations is Atomistix ToolKit, which combines density functional theory and non-equilibrium Green's functions to ab initio electronic-structure and transport calculations. Atomistix ToolKit is developed from the academic codes TranSIESTA and McDCal.

First-principles simulation software for nanoscience

QuantumWise software is used to model the electronic structure of molecules, crystals, and surfaces. It is distinguished by its unique capability to simulate electrical transport in nano-devices, and its ability to treat large-scale systems. The QuantumWise platform is based on an open architecture which integrates a powerful scripting language with a GUI platform. The software is actively used in a wide range of application areas such as:

Molecular electronics

Carbon nanotubes and graphene

Nanowires

Computational material science

Bulk and nanoscale semiconductors

Surface electrochemistry

Magnetic systems

Download product presentation >>>>> Download software

2009

INDIA

15. International conference on Advanced nanomaterials and naotechnolgy (ICANN-2009) ,December 9-11,2009 centre for nanotechnology, IIT Guwahati. Brochure,  Registeration >> Deadlines: Online Registration : Aug 30, 2009,Abstract Submission : Aug 30, 2009
Registration Fee Payment : Oct 15, 2009

14. Invited talk in "Indo-US Workshop" on Nanotechnology- Applications and Implications" from November 10th-12th, 2009
at the Indian Institute of Chemical Technology, Hyderabad, India              Apply >>

13. Invited talk in Nanotech India 2009, International Conf on Nanotechnolgy, 14-16th Aug 2009, Cochin.    Apply >>

12. Invited talk at “NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCES IN NANOMATERIALS, DEVICES AND
TECHNOLOGIES” (NCANDT-2009) Department of Physics SV Degree College, Kadapa, 11th and 12th July, 2009.

11. Invited talk titled" Basics of Nanotechnology ", Students of Padmasashadri, IITM, Chennai, 11, May 2009.

10. Invited talk titled "NANOMATERIALS:-PROPERTIES, SYNTHESIS AND APPLICATIONS" at Department of Physics, Velammal College,
Chennai , April 2009.

9. Invited talk titled" NANOMATERIALS:-PROPERTIES, SYNTHESIS AND APPLICATIONS", National Level Students Technical Symposium,
Tiruchengode , 4th April 2009.

8. Invited talk "Nanoscience and technology " in Mechanical Engineering dept, Anna University, 25, March 2009, Chennai.

7. Talk in "Technology Appreciation Program" at IITM, on 2 March 2009, Chennai.

6. Invited talk in "Synthesis,Characterization and Applications of Nanostructured materials," on 27th & 28th February 2008,
Sri Sathya Sai University, Prasanthi Nilayam.

5. Invited talk in "International workshop on Nanoscience and technology", Anna University, Chennai, during 23-27, February, 2009.

4. Invited talk titled "CARBON NANOSTRUCTURES:- SYNTHESIS AND APPLICATIONS" at Mepco Schlenk Engineering College,
Virudhunagar duing 20-21 Feb 2009.

3. Invited talk in "HRDD program", NANOMATERIALS:-PROPERTIES, SYNTHESIS AND APPLICATIONS", VSSC, Trivandrum, 19th Feb 2009.

2. Invited talks titled "Nano technology:- Principle, Processing, Properties and applications" at UGC Program, SVU University,
Tirupathi, 13, 14 th Feb 2009.

1. Invited talk titled "SYNTHESIS AND APPLICATIONS OF FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS" at Department of Physics, Velammal College,
Chennai during 29-30th Jan 2009.

Abroad

1. Invited talk titled "CARBON BASED NANOMATERIALS:-SYNTHESIS AND HYDROGEN STORAGE" at Department of Physics,
University of Geneva, Switzerland, 25 May 2009.

2. Invited talk titled "CARBON BASED NANOMATERIALS:-SYNTHESIS AND ENERGY APPLICATIONS" at Department of Chemistry,
Darmstadt, Germany, 20 May 2009.

3. Invited talk titled "CARBON BASED NANOMATERIALS:- SYNTHESIS AND APPLICATIONS" at Department of Physics,
Duisberg, Germany, 15 May 2009.

More
Institute of Nanotechnology: Events Worldwide
Nanotechnology Conferences

Nanotechnology Conferences, Exhibitions and Events
Nanotechnology Events & Conferences

To know more about nanotechnology the following lists of sites will help you.Some sites contains great information some less.You can search on google by using the keyword Nanotechnology Google will shows a list of keywords related to nanotechnolgy.

To search for PDF files type the keyword Nanotechnology filetype:pdf in google.Then related pdf files willbe displayed this will save time.For more us google Advanced Search option. You can also use Google scholar.

To know more about INVITED TALKS & PROGRAMS ORGANISED ,IIT madras physics research-ramp site will help. This site will provide latest information about upcoming seminars,Workshops and CONFERENCEs. You don't want to visit a hundred site to know about upcoming nanotechnology events. Nanoguru also provides an events section which gave you latest information about upcoming seminars,Workshops and conferences etc.You can download brochers,registration form from it or you can go to the corresponding pages easily.So don't forget to check it regularly.

Nanotechnology - Wikipedia
Nanotechnology Magazine
Rice University Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology
Nanotechnology.com
National Nanotechnology Initiative
Nanotechnow
Nanotechnology Directories
Nanotechnology Sites on the WWW
Google Directory-Nanotechnology
Yahoo! Directory-Nanotechnology


Now nanotechnology can be encapsulated in an apparently simple device called a personal nanofactory that may sit on your desktop. Packed with miniature chemical processors, computing, and robotics, it will produce a wide-range of items quickly, cleanly, and inexpensively, building products directly from blueprints.

To build a nanofactory, you need to start with a working fabricator, a nanoscale device that can combine individual molecules into useful shapes. A fabricator could build a very small nanofactory, which could build another one twice as big, and so on. Within a period of weeks, you have a personal desktop model. Products made by a nanofactory will be assembled from nanoblocks, which will be fabricated within the nanofactory. The product that comes out of the nanofactory will be a mostly-solid block or brick that will unfold like a pop-up book or inflate like an air mattress. Computer aided design (CAD) programs will make it possible to create state-of-the-art products simply by specifying a pattern of predesigned nanoblocks. The question of when we will see a flood of MNT products boils down to the question of how quickly the first fabricator can be designed and built.

A personal nanofactory will consist of trillions of fabricators, and could only be built by another nanofactory. But a fabricator could build a very small nanofactory, with just a few fabricators in it. A smaller nanofactory could build a bigger one, and so on. Most of the mass of a nanofactory is in the form of working fabricators, and according to the best estimates we have today, a fabricator could make its own mass in just a few hours. So a nanofactory could make another one twice as big in just a few days—maybe less than a day. Do that about sixty times, and you have a tabletop model.

Inside the personal nanofactory, each fabricator will make nanoblocks. A good size for a nanoblock might be a cube 200 nanometers on a side (the distance your fingernails grow in three minutes). This is small enough to be made by a single fabricator in a few hours, but large enough to contain a small CPU, a microwatt of motors or generators, or a fabricator system flexible enough to duplicate itself if given the right commands. In other words, each fabricator could make a substantial piece of nanofactory functionality—and the same modular pieces would be re-used in other products.

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