An Introduction to Nanotechnology and Its Applications to Medicine

Gabriel A. Silva
7 min readJul 10, 2023
Image credit: Getty

Nanotechnology and nanoengineering are producing significant scientific and technological advances in diverse fields including medicine and physiology. In a broad sense, they can be defined as the science and engineering involved in the design, synthesis, characterization, and application of materials and devices whose smallest functional organization in at least one dimension is on the nanometer scale, ranging from a few to several hundred nanometers. A nanometer is one billionth of a meter or three orders of magnitude smaller than a micron, roughly the size scale of a molecule itself (e.g., a DNA molecule is about 2.5 nm long while a sodium atom is about 0.2 nm).

To give an appreciation of just how significant an order of magnitude is, let alone three orders when going from micron to nanometer scales, consider that no one would ever walk from New York to San Diego, but with a single order of magnitude change in speed (the equivalent of changing speed from walking to driving), you would get to San Diego across the United States in about 2 days. Flying, which would be two orders of magnitude faster than walking, would get you across the United States in a few hours, and in a supersonic plane (or three orders faster than walking), it would take you minutes. (Walking a straight line between the two cities would take about 42 days at…

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Gabriel A. Silva

Professor of Bioengineering and Neurosciences, University of California San Diego