Resource Links
Web-Based Resourcesin Surface Science, Catalysis and Nanoscience
American Elements
American Elements fundamental expertise in the properties, applications, and cost-effective
                                 manufacturing of advanced and engineered materials, including ultra high purity refining
                                 (99.9999%) and nanotechnology (Mono Atomic Elements) scales allows them to meet the
                                 informational and materials needs of national laboratories, universities, institutes
                                 and our customers in a wide variety of industry groups, including energy, electronics,
                                 aerospace, automotive, optics, and pharma/cosmetics. They offer technical information
                                 and manufactured products for over 3,000 elemental metal, metallic compound, ceramic
                                 and crystalline catalog items and numerous customer proprietary formulations from
                                 their facilities in the United States and China and offices in the U.S., Europe, Australia
                                 and Brazil. Their operations are fully staffed and equipped to bulk manufacture the
                                 advanced elements in virtually every purity and physical morphology that nature and
                                 current technology commercially allow, including the entire rare earth series, ultra
                                 high purity forms of most metals, complex single phase doped structures using either
                                 co-precipitation or calcination/re-crystallization processes, macro, meso and nanoscale
                                 powders with highly specific particle distributions, shapes and surface areas and
                                 custom grown single and polycrystalline crystal of the III-V and II-VI compounds with
                                 special orientations, purities and dopants. Take a look at theirNanotechnology Information Center.
Association for Emission Control by Catalysis
AECC are the international association of European companies making technologies for
                                 automobile exhaust emissions control.
The members of AECC are companies operating worldwide in the development, testing
                                 and manufacture of autocatalysts, ceramic and metallic substrates and specialty materials incorporated into the catalytic
                                 converter. This includes catalyst, adsorber and filter-based systems for the control
                                 of gaseous and particulate emissions from diesel and other lean burn engines.
Catalyst-equipped cars were first introduced in the USA in 1974 but only appeared
                                 on European roads in 1985 and were legislated for in 1993. Now more than 275 million
                                 of the world's 500 million cars and over 85% of all new cars produced worldwide are
                                 equipped with autocatalysts. Catalytic converters are also increasingly fitted on
                                 heavy-duty vehicles, motorcycles and off-road engines and vehicles
AVS Buyers Guide
Resource for vacuum equipment, services and reference.
Milestones In Catalyst Development of BASF
Catalysis: Some Web Resources from Science Magazine
The Review, Viewpoint, and News articles in the14 March 2003 special issue of Sciencesurvey the vast field of catalysis -- from the promise of catalytic gold nanodots,
                                 to catalytic production of hydrogen for fuel cells, to new bio-inspired catalysts
                                 that are finding their way into industrial applications. To provide some additional
                                 context, they've assembled here some links to interesting Web resources on catalysis.
Chemical & Engineering News NanoFocus
Nanotechnology news for the chemical world.
Engelhard
                                 			Industrial engine emissions control catalysts
Nanomaterials
Foresight Institute - Nanotechnology
Nanotechnology: the Coming Revolution in Molecular Manufacturing
Molecular nanotechnology: Thorough, inexpensive control of the structure of matter
                                 based on molecule-by-molecule control of products and byproducts of molecular manufacturing.
K.Eric Drexler, Chris Peterson, Gayle Pergamit Haldor Topsøe
Internet Resources by Academic Discipline
A collection from the University of California, Berkeley
International Council on Nanotechnology (ICON)
ICON’s mission is to assess, communicate, and reduce nanotechnology environmental
                                 and health risks while maximizing its societal benefit. We do this through:
- Science and engineering research into the environmental and health impacts of engineered nanostructures
 - Social science research into public acceptance of new technology, and the role that regulation and government policies can and should play
 - Collaborative policy activities that develop international standards for engineered nanostructure terminology, safety guidelines, and best laboratory practices
 - Public communication and outreach that tracks all relevant technical data on nanotechnology’s risks and presents this information in a format accessible to non-specialists
 
JISC Resource Guide for Physical Sciences
A range of resources has been set up specifically to meet the needs of those working
                                 and studying in the physical sciences. Physical sciences encompassastronomy, chemistry, physics, earth sciences andmaterial science.
Librarians Index to the Internet - Science
Nanoelectronics & Nanocomputing Home Page
Nanoelectronics is the electronics technology for a future generation of much, much
                                 smaller and more densely integrated computers. The Nanoelectronics Home Page provides
                                 the Internet Gateway to nanoelectronics research and development information and resources
                                 from around the world.
NAS Nanotechnology Gallery
Images and Videos NASA Ames Developed Components
Particle-Surface Resources on the Internet
Particle-Solid Interactions Web Server
This server contains information useful for researchers in the field of interactions
                                 of ions, electrons, and energetic photons with solids. Maintained by Raúl Baragiola,
                                 University of Virginia, USA.
PEERS - Physics Encyclopedia of E-Mail Records
PEERS is a FREE service from Institute of Physics Publishing. It provides a moderated
                                 global e-mail directory of people working in science; a place where you can search
                                 for peers, colleagues or any useful contacts in your chosen scientific field.
Surface Science Analysis Forum
Surface Science on the Web from Omicron
A Complete Beginner's Guide to Vacuum History, Terminology, & Technology
Virginia Nanotechnology Initiative
The Virginia Nanotechnology Initiative (VNI) is an alliance of interests from academia,
                                 industry and the public sector serving the nanotechnology community across the Commonwealth.
                                 VNI facilitates collaboration to advance Virginia's nanotechnology research, creates
                                 conditions to accelerate technology transfer to industry, furthers educational and
                                 workforce training programs in nanotechnology, and seeks to position Virginia at the
                                 forefront of nanotechnology innovation.
Web-Based Resources from John A Venables
WWW Chemistry Guide
A collection of links for chemists and researchers involved in organic, biochemical,
                                 computational, medicinal and/or other chemistry research. We are annotating only really
                                 high quality sites, and aren't aiming at a large directory.
There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom
Landmark lecture by Richard Feynman
