The Advanced Study Institute on Synthesis, Functional Properties and
Applications of Nanostructures, held at the Knossos Royal Village,
Heraklion, Crete, Greece, July 26, 2002 - August 4, 2002, successfully
reviewed the state-of-the-art of nanostructures and nanotechnology. It
was concluded that Nanotechnology is widely agreed to be the research
focus that will lead to the next generation of breakthroughs in science
and engineering. There are three cornerstones to the expectation that
Nanotechnology will yield revolutionary advances in understanding and
application: - Breakthroughs in properties that arise from materials
fabricated from the nanoscale. - Synergistic behavior that arise from
the combination of disparate types of materials (soft vs. hard, organic
vs. inorganic, chemical vs. biological vs. solid state) at the
nanoscale. - Exploitation of natural (e.g. chemical and biological)
assembly mechanisms that can accomplish structural control at the
nanoscale. It is expected that this will lead to paradigms for
assembling bio-inspired functional systems that accomplish desirable
properties that are either unavailable or prohibitively expensive using
top-down approaches.