Nanotechnology and Human Health

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 10.05.06

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Overview
  2. Rationale
  3. Objectives
  4. Background
  5. Strategies
  6. Class Activities
  7. Notes
  8. Bibliographies
  9. Appendix A: Implementing District Standards

The Size of Matter: Why Properties Change at the Nanoscale

Sharon Felecia Mott

Published September 2010

Tools for this Unit:

Notes

  1. 1 Richard Booker and Earl Boysen, Nanotechnology for Dummies (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Publishing, 2005), 40.
  2. 2 John Tyler Bonner, Why Size Matters (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press), 4-5. Shawn Y. Stevens, LeeAnn M. Sutherland, and Joseph Krajccik. The Big Ideas of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, 80.
  3. 3 Bonner, Why Size Matters, 5.
  4. 4 Stevens, The Big Ideas in Nanoscale Science and Engineering, 80.
  5. 5 Stevens, The Big Ideas in Nanoscale Science and Engineering, 78.
  6. 6 Nanosense "Unique Properties at the Nanoscale" (2010) http://nanosense.org/activities/sizematters/10.
  7. 7 Nanosense "Unique Properties at the Nanoscale." 10.
  8. 8 Booker, Nanotechnology for Dummies, 73.
  9. 9 WordNet Search-3.0" "Size" (2010) http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
  10. 10 Stevens, Big Ideas in Nanoscale Science and Engineering, 78.
  11. 11 WordNet Search -3.0 "Scale" (2010) http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
  12. 12 WordNet Search-3.0 "Scale".
  13. 13 Fathom Archive, "The Biology of B-Movie Monsters", 6.
  14. 14 Nanosense "Unique Properties at the Nanoscale" (2010) http://nanosense.org/activities/sizematters/37.
  15. 15 Stevens, The Big Ideas of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, 83.
  16. 16 Nanosense "Unique Properties at the Nanoscale"5

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