Jerusalem Post
 
'Nanotechnology  becoming part of daily life' 
By _SHARON  UDASIN_ (http://www.jpost.com/Authors/AuthorPage.aspx?id=71)  
03/27/2012 02:40 
"The great secrets hidden in small pieces of material" amaze  President 
Peres. 

 
 
>From smartphone touchscreens, to the most advanced defense  systems, to 
photovoltaic solar panels, nanotechnology has become an increasingly  integral 
component of everyday life.

Representatives from companies in a  wide range of sectors presented their 
innovative tiny-sized technologies during  the Monday morning session of “
NanoIsrael 2012: The Third International  Nanotechnology Conference and 
Exhibition,” held in Tel Aviv on Monday and  Tuesday.

Dr. Jonathan Goldstein and his start-up firm 3G Solar are  beginning to use 
nanotechnology to perfect their unique type of photovoltaic  panels, which 
are made with low-cost Dye Solar Cells – a layer of nano-sized  titanium 
dioxide particles saturated with dye, according to the  company.

Unlike standard photovoltaic cells, which are generally made of  silicon or 
thin film, the 3G cells with titania and adsorbed dye act more like  
electrochemical batteries, Goldstein explained. Moreover, these cells are made  
of 
much cheaper, less toxic, more lightweight materials, and are less 
sensitive  to cloudy weather, temperature fluctuations, orientation and shade, 
he  
said.

While their cells already operate in a very efficient manner, the  company 
is aiming to continue increasing this efficiency, and is currently  working 
in a partnership with teams at Bar Ilan University and the Weizmann  
Institute of Science to further develop the cells using a mechanism called  
Förster 
Resonance Energy Transfer, he said.

Espousing similar ideals of  efficiency, but in an entirely different 
sector, a company called CollPlant is  manufacturing a nano-sized product as an 
effective mechanism for orthopedic  treatments and wound management. 
CollPlant is proliferating human collagen  molecules – the most abundant 
protein the 
in the human body, only 1.5 nanometers  in diameter – by replicating the 
five genes responsible for the protein in  plants, explained Yehiel Tal, 
CollPlant CEO. Expressed in plants, the genes have  the ability to generate the 
precursor to human collagen, called procollagen,  according to the company.

“This is the basic building block – and for  this reason we selected this 
molecule,” he said, calling collagen a “scaffold”  for tissue repair.

CollPlant is now conducting a study in partnership  with Maccabi Health 
Fund, in which researchers are treating 16 patients with  diabetic foot ulcers 
using Vergenix, one of the company’s collagen healing  products, Tal said.

Nanotechnology, a field to which Israeli companies  like 3G Solar and 
CollPlant continue to be substantial contributors, involves  making the most of 
something tiny using human brain power – something that  President Shimon 
Peres called making “more and more of less and less,” during  his opening 
address at the conference.

“All of this started with the  nanotechnology,” Peres said, stressing just 
how much nanotechnology has changed  basic scientific concepts over the 
past couple of decades. “Look at the great  secrets that are hidden in small 
pieces of material but also [those] of  chemistry, of connections, of 
relationships, of systems. And so I believe in the  coming 10 years we will see 
a 
very, very different world.”

“We live in a  world where the questions are not changing; the answers are 
changing,” he  added.

Nanotechnology will be a key element of the global challenge to  achieve 
environmental sustainability – and is therefore an integral part of the  
Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development’s Green Growth Strategy  
launched in May 2011, according to Dr. Francoise Roure, chair of the  
France-based OECD Working Party on Nanotechnology.

Roure’s group was  established in 2007 as a subsidiary of the OECD’s 
Committee for Scientific and  Technological Policy and aims to promote 
international cooperation to facilitate  research, development and responsible 
commercialization of  nanotechnology.

>From last year through 2014, the working party will be  monitoring and 
analyzing policies for nanotechnology, investigating how to gain  economic 
returns from nanotechnology investments and monitoring the societal  impact of 
nanotechnology, Roure explained.

One such societal impact – of  nanotechnology and other scientific fields –
 is the cross-border cooperation  that must occur in order to ensure their 
successful development, experts  agreed.

“We live in a world where borders have disappeared in the science  and 
innovation environment,” said Dr. Suzanne Fortier, president of the Natural  
Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.

Students and  researchers of nanotechnology and other scientific fields 
need to be part of  high-performing teams all over the world, and governments 
therefore must promote  the mobility of young people in these areas, 
according to Fortier.

“We  need to be part of these strategic teams of researchers in public and 
private  sectors to be a strong competitor,” she said of her own country. 

-- 
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