All over campus, Stanford has eagerly embraced the "grand challenges" of 
nanotechnology. Just this April, the Stanford Nanofabrication Facility (SNF) hosted an 
open house to celebrate its selection to be part of the National Science 
Foundation-sponsored National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network sprawling across 
thirteen universities nationwide. Along with the new Nanocharacterization Laboratory 
expanding the SNF, the nearly finished Manoharan lab that Stanford students bike past on 
the way to physics lab embodies the prominent place nanotechnology has in Stanford 
research for years to come. Specifically, the Manoharan lab is equipped to manipulate 
matter on an atomic level. Here's a cross-section of nanotechnology research currently 
being pursued at Stanford:








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All this from pencil lead: "graphite is a very old material, but take a tiny tube of 
graphite and it has totally different properties, says Dai. "That's what nanotech is all 
about."
In your brain right now, a motor protein called kinesin is shuttling vesicles 
loaded with neurotransmitters to the synapses in your brain, allowing you to 
read this. While some researchers are trying to make similar molecular motors 
scoot around and throw switches on electronic chips, it's hardly certain these 
motors can ever do better than the electrical contacts that are routinely used 
today. The future of biological nanotechnology may not be clear, but what is, 
says Professor




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