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Nanotechnology: Principles, Progress, and Real-World Impact

Aditya Shinde

Abstract


Nanotechnology is the science of creating and using materials at the scale of individual atoms and molecules — typically between 1 and 100 nanometres. At this scale, ordinary materials behave in surprising and often highly useful ways: gold becomes red, copper turns transparent, and silver gains powerful antimicrobial properties that it simply does not have in bulk form. Over the past three decades, nanotechnology has moved steadily from laboratory curiosity to practical application, touching medicine, electronics, energy, agriculture, and environmental science. This paper traces that journey. It begins with the foundational science — why nanoscale materials behave differently — before examining the main categories of nanomaterials and how they are made. It then explores applications across several sectors, supported by data from published studies. The centrepiece of the paper is a case study examining how silver nanoparticles are being used in advanced wound dressings, including clinical trial data, observed benefits, and unresolved concerns. The paper closes by discussing the environmental and safety challenges that still need to be addressed before nanotechnology can be deployed at full scale without unintended consequences. 

Cite as:

Aditya Shinde. (2026). Nanotechnology: Principles, Progress, and Real-World Impact. Journal of Advances in Nanotechnology and Its Applications, 8(1), 69–79. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19706712



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