
For abstract submission visit: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/submit-abstract
TO BOOK YOUR SLOT VISIT: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/registration

TO BOOK YOUR SLOT VISIT: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/registration

Make your stand at Nanotechnology 2020 Rome| ItalyMake your stand at Nanotechnology 2020 Rome| Italy

The aerospace industry is one of the most important heavy industries in the world. Many companies rely on their ability to transport both products and people around the world at speed. Therefore, it is unsurprising that the global aircraft manufacturing market was valued at approximately 400 billion USD in 2017, with a predominant portion of this accounted for by military spending.

Nanotechnology Research and Practice» is to present the results of modern researches in the field of nanotechnology. The priority direction of development journal is coverage of related multidisciplinary problems, the use of new methods and approaches in the context of practical application.

Scientific sessions

JUZERJANGBARWALA, CEO – Voltek Energy, USA
Title: Role of Nanotechnologyin the Water-Energy-Food Nexus
Hurryup: Only few #speaker slots left for the conference
Contact us at: nanotech@heraldmeetings.org
WhatSapp Number: +1 609-540-7643

Greetings from Nanotechnology 2020!
Herald Meetings LLC of Nanotechnology 2020 invites all academica and Business
announcer, elocutionist from different universities and research institutional in the field
of Science and Engineering. Have a stage and explore your research work on March 02-
03, 2020 at most historic place in Europe Rome| Italy, Conference consist of 24 Main
tracks.
Important Keynote Lecturer by Sandra Cauffman, Acting Director at NASA (National
Aeronautics and Space Administration), USA.
Note: Only 8 Speaker slots are available to fit into scientific program. More number
of delegate opportunities are available
Important links for the Conference:
Abstractsubmission: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/submit-abstract
BrochureDownload: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/brochure-download
Registrationlink: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/registration
Scientificsessions: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/call-for-abstract
Contact us:
John Benson | Program Director
1300 I Street NW, Suite 400E,
Washington D.C, 20005
WhatSapp: +1 609-540-7643
Contact: +120-281-79658
Email: nanotech@heraldmeetings.org

Greetings from Nanotechnology 2020!
Herald Meetings LLC of Nanotechnology 2020 invites all academica and Business announcer, elocutionist from different universities and research institutional in the field of Science and Engineering. Have a stage and explore your research work on March 02-03, 2020 at most historic place in Europe Rome| Italy, Conference consist of 24 Main tracks.
Important Keynote Lecturer by Sandra Cauffman, Acting Director at NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration), USA.
Note: Only 8 Speaker slots are available to fit into scientific program. More number of delegate opportunities are available
Important links for the Conference:
Abstractsubmission: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/submit-abstract
BrochureDownload: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/brochure-download
Registrationlink: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/registration
Scientificsessions: https://nanotechnology.heraldmeetings.com/call-for-abstract
Contact us:
John Benson | Program Director
1300 I Street NW, Suite 400E,
Washington D.C, 20005
WhatSapp: +1 609-540-7643
Contact: +120-281-79658
Email: nanotech@heraldmeetings.org

The problem of scale is unavoidable when talking about applying materials made in a laboratory into an industrial process. It’s one thing to make small transistors with submicron features, but what if you want to coat the entire surface of a jetliner with a conductive nanomaterial?
That’s the kind of problem Namiko Yamamoto is trying to solve.
“I’m from the Aerospace Engineering Department, and what I want to do is apply nano- and micro-engineered materials to airplanes, satellites, or other large structures,” says the assistant professor.
Engineering materials with high quality and functionality at the scale of a microchip or in a thin film is something materials researchers have the expertise to do well, but scaling those processes up to meter and multi-meter lengths is where these laboratory materials run into problems.
The unique properties that occur at the small scale can disappear at larger scale, or the performance of the material degrades with increasing size.
“A lot of the unique properties are coming from nano-scale organization,” she says. “If you want to make them larger, those are going to become hard to control. When you go to larger scales you can’t enjoy the same degree of performance as the small samples.”
In spring 2016, she was awarded just under $380,000 to study scalable manufacturing of multi-functional polymer nanocomposites by the Office of Naval Research.
Yamamoto has worked extensively with carbon nanotubes (CNTs) as a potential conductive-coating nanomaterial for use in protecting airplanes from lightning strikes. These nanotubes were aligned, and thus become efficient electrical conductors, like tiny lightning rods. This approach could lead to considerable weight savings over the currently used metal mesh layer. She originally fabricated such material by first organizing the nanotubes and then infiltrating with a polymer; however, this method was not the most scalable. Now, she first mixes nanoparticles together with polymer, and then organizes the nanoparticles using external oscillating magnetic fields.