Have Yourself A Merry “Nano” Christmas!
Nanotechnology Holiday Gifts
WASHINGTON—Tell a friend you are buying them a nanotechnology gift for the holidays, and visions of Star Trek collectables or geeky electronic toys may start to dance in their heads. But nanotechnology gifts can include everything from fleece jackets and gloves from the Lands’ End™ catalog—with Nano-Tex® Resists Static treatment—to an Apollo Diamond® engagement ring.
For do-it-yourselfers, there are Black & Decker’s DeWalt cordless power tools, with a powerful nanotech battery. Children wish for Apple’s® iPod Nano®. Twentysomethings may think the ideal present for their first apartment kitchen is a set of FresherLonger™ Miracle Food Storage containers by Sharper Image®, infused with naturally antibacterial silver nanoparticles which makers claim help fruits, vegetables, cheeses and even raspberries stay fresh longer. Or, they may want the Babolat® NS™ Tour Tennis Racket, with carbon nanotubes used to stiffen key areas of the racquet head and shaft, which the company touts as 100 times more rigid than steel and 6 times lighter!
According to recent polls, the majority of Americans have heard little or nothing about nanotechnology. But last year, according to Lux Research, nanotechnology was incorporated into more than $30 billion in manufactured goods. By 2014, an estimated $2.6 trillion in global manufactured goods will incorporate nanotechnology.
To learn more about nanotechnology and about the more than 350 manufacturer-identified nanotechnology consumer products currently being sold in department and hardware stores, pharmacies, and catalogues, check out the Project’s free online consumer product inventory.
This first and largest publicly available inventory of nanotechnology consumer products is newly updated with almost 70 percent more nanotechnology consumer products than when it was first launched in March 2006. Nanoscale silver is now the most often identified nanomaterial used in consumer products in the inventory. The number of products containing nano-engineered silver has nearly doubled in eight months. The second highest nanoscale material cited by manufacturers is carbon, including carbon nanotubes and fullerenes, up almost 35 percent.
For more images related to this article click here. All images © 2006 – The Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies.
November 27, 2006