[Home]   [Full version]  

ANSI Establishes Nanotechnology Standards Panel

Aug 09 ,Nanotechnology


The American National Standards Institute announced today the formation of the Nanotechnology Standards Panel (ANSI-NSP), a new coordinating body for the development of standards in the area of nanotechnology. Nanotechnology refers to the manufacturing or manipulating of matter at the atomic and molecular level, or nanoscale. The panel will convene September 29-30, 2004, in Gaithersburg, MD, to focus its initial work on nomenclature and terminology.

ANSI was approached by the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) in the Executive Office of the President to address this area of standardization in support of academics, various industries, the investment community and government agencies that utilize nanotechnology. According to Dr. John H. Marburger, director of the OSTP, “As new materials, structures, devices and systems are developed that derive their properties and function due to their nanoscale dimensions, it will become increasingly important to the . . . stakeholders to have an agreed upon nomenclature with which to communicate.”

To guide the efforts of the ANSI-NSP, a Steering Committee is being formed and will be co-chaired by representatives of government, industry and the academic community. The co-chairs include: Dr. Clayton Teague, Director of the National Nanotechnology Coordination Office (NNCO); Dr. Vicki Colvin, Professor of Chemistry at Rice University and Director of the National Science Foundation-sponsored Center for Biological and Environmental Nanotechnology (CBEN); and Dr. David Bishop, Vice President of Nanotechnology Research, Lucent Technologies, and President of the New Jersey Nanotechnology Consortium.

“Thousands of organizations around the world are pursuing the promise of nanotechnology, and as research and development in this field evolves, stakeholders will be increasingly reliant upon standardization to guide work in this area,” explained ANSI president and CEO Dr. Mark W. Hurwitz. “ANSI’s experience in bringing together diverse interests for standardization efforts will be very helpful in meeting the needs of the rapidly expanding nanotechnology community.”

The ANSI-NSP is open to all interested parties. ANSI has issued a call to organizations and individuals working or familiar with nanotechnology to consider the opportunity to participate on the panel and its Steering Committee. Click here to answer a brief survey and indicate your interest in the ANSI-NSP. Responses are requested by August 20, 2004.

For more information is please visit the ANSI website at http://www.ansi.org/nsp.

Source: ANSI

Related stories:

Lucent Technologies' Bell Labs To Host Nanotechnology Standards Panel
In support of the U.S. government's effort to encourage growth of the nascent nanotechnology industry, Lucent Technologies' Bell Labs will host the second meeting of the American National Standards Institute's Nanotechnology Standards Panel (ANSI-NSP) Steering Committee on Jan. 19. The meeting will be held at Lucent's Murray Hill, N.J., headquarters, which also is home to the New Jersey Nanotechnology Consortium (NJNC), a subsidiary of Lucent Technologies.
'Nanobamas' fuse art, science, technology and politics
(PhysOrg.com) -- A University of Michigan professor has created 3-D portraits of the president-elect that are smaller than a grain of salt. He calls them "nanobamas."
McMaster University unveils world's most advanced microscope
The most advanced and powerful electron microscope on the planet—capable of unprecedented resolution—has been installed in the new Canadian Centre for Electron Microscopy at McMaster University.
IBM Develops Computational Scaling Solution for Next Generation '22nm' Semiconductors
In response to ever increasing demands for smaller, more powerful and energy-efficient devices for cloud computing and high-performance servers, IBM today announced the semiconductor industry's first computationally based process for production of next generation 22nm semiconductors. Known as Computational Scaling (CS) -- a process that enables the production of complex, powerful and energy-efficient semiconductors at 22nms and beyond -- this new initiative will feature support from several of IBM's key partners initially including Mentor Graphics and Toppan Printing.
Professor-turned-producer learns the movie biz
It's not every day that a research scientist and university professor gets to see his work on the silver screen. But in just a few months, Richard W. Siegel will get to watch his name scroll down the giant screen of a darkened IMAX theater with a new title that seems light years away from laboratory benches and lecture halls: Executive Producer.
Researchers create mercury-absorbent container linings for broken CFLs
With rising energy prices and greater concern over global warming, compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) are having a successful run. Sales of the curlicue, energy-sipping bulbs, which previously had languished since they were introduced in the United States in 1979, reached nearly 300 million last year. Experts expect that figure to rise steeply by 2012, when a federal law requiring energy-efficient lighting goes into effect.
Federal government taps NC State experts to explain nanotech risks
The arm of the federal government responsible for coordinating nanotechnology research and regulations across the country has called on experts from North Carolina State University to craft a white paper that will lay out how government and industry officials should communicate potential risks associated with nanotechnology to the media and the public. NC State communication expert Dr. David Berube has been negotiating this project for nearly 18 months.
Researchers developing system to efficiently convert biomass to ethanol
Iowa State University researchers are developing an integrated system of thermochemical and catalytic technologies to efficiently produce ethanol from plant biomass.

News discussion:

Nanotechnology news

[Home]   [Full version]