雅思阅读第077套P2-Nanotechnology: its development and uses

雅思阅读第077套P2-Nanotechnology: its development and uses-托您的福
雅思阅读第077套P2-Nanotechnology: its development and uses
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Nanotechnology: its development and uses

A Nanotechnology has been hailed by many as being a twentieth-century miracle of science. Essentially, nanotechnology, a term derived from Greek, translating literally as ‘dwarf technology’ is, as the origin of its name suggests, engineering at the atomic level. Scientists work with particles of substances known as ‘nanoparticles’ which may measure no more than 1 nanometre or a billionth of a metre. That’s around 40,000 times smaller than the width of the average human hair. Whilst some of these substances derived from carbon compounds are manufactured, others, such as metals, are naturally-occurring or arise as a by-product of another process e.g. volcanic ash or smoke from wood burning. What makes these substances of such scientific interest is that their minute size facilitates medical and technological processes that would otherwise be impossible.

B It may be something of a revelation for many of us to learn that nanotechnology – or its concept – is far from cutting-edge science. In fact, nanotechnology as an idea was first referred to in an influential lecture by American physicist, Richard Feynman, as far back as 1959. During the lecture, entitled ‘There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom’, Feynman outlined the basic concept of nanotechnology. Individual atoms and molecules, he claimed, could in the future be created by a physical process. Such a process, he envisaged, would involve the building of a set of precise tools to build and operate another proportionally smaller set. The building of increasingly minute tools at the microscopic level would in turn produce ultra-microscopic materials, later to become known as ‘nanoparticles’.

C Strangely, what should have sparked a scientific revolution was then virtually forgotten about for the next 15 years. In 1974, a Japanese scientist, Norio Taniguchi, of the Tokyo University of Science reintroduced Feynman’s theory and put a new name to an old concept, referring to the science as ‘nanotechnology’. However, it wasn’t until nearly a decade later, in the 1980s, that the way was paved for nanotechnology to leave the realm of theoretical science and become reality. Two major scientific developments within a relatively short period were to enable practical application of nanotechnology. The invention of the Scanning Tunnelling Microscope (STM), combined with the discovery of nano-sized particles termed ‘fullerenes’, were to prove a turning point in nanotechnology.

D Fullerenes are derived from carbon molecules and, in common with other nanoparticles, possess chemical and physical properties that are of huge scientific interest. The potential value of fullerenes for medical science was first raised in 2003 and in 2005 when the scientific magazine ‘Chemistry and Biology’ ran an article describing the use of fullerenes as light-activated antimicrobial agents. Since then, fullerenes have been used for several biomedical applications ranging from X-ray imaging to treating cancer by targeting cancer cells. In addition, these nanoparticles have been used in the manufacture of commercial products, from sunscreen to cosmetics and some food products. Furthermore, nanoparticles of metals, like gold and silver, have been used in environmental clean-ups of oil slicks and other forms of pollution. The remarkable properties of nanoparticles are down to two main factors: their greater surface-to-weight ratio, compared to larger particles which promotes the attachment of substances to their surface, and their minute size which allows them to penetrate cell membranes. These properties are of great benefit, for example in medicine, as drugs to fight cancer or AIDS can be attached to nanoparticles to reach their target cell in the human body.

E However, despite the amazing properties attributed to nanoparticles such as fullerenes, nanotechnology has yet to win wider universal acceptance in scientific circles. For the very properties that make nanoparticles so valuable to technology and medical science are also the ones that make them potentially so toxic. Such pro perties are potentially lethal if toxic substances attach themselves to the same nanoparticles, thereby delivering a fatal toxin through the cell membranes into the cells themselves. The toxic effect of these compounds is further increased, since their size permits them to enter the bloodstream and hence the body’s major organs. Furthermore, the nanoparticles in themselves are essentially a foreign element being introduced to the body. Unlike foreign elements, such as bacteria, the body has no natural immune system to deaI with these ultramicroscopic particles. Scientists have yet to convince the nanotechnology sceptics that the potential side effects of nanoparticles are more than compensated for by the advantages that they confer. It may be, however, that opposition to this technology is no more than a general distrust of scientific innovation. In fact, Urban Wiesing from the University of Tubingen has been quoted as saying ‘Many of the risks associated with nanotechnology have at least been encountered in part in other technologies as well.’ He also believes that regulations can be put in place to minimise such risks. This is a view echoed by the Fed eral Environment Agency that proposes that such risks are vastly outweighed by the potential benefits of nanotechnology, in particular for the environment.

 

SECTION 2: QUESTIONS 14-26

Questions 14-18

The text has five paragraphs, A-E.

Which paragraph contains the following information?

Write the correct letter, A-E, next to questions 14-18.

14 ___________ promising beginnings

15 ___________ definition of a revolutionary technology

16 ___________ repackaging an old idea

17 ___________ dubious attributes

18 ___________ the foundation of a new technology

Questions 19-23

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

 

19Nanotechnology

Ahas limited value.

Bis not related to science.

Cincites controversy.

Dposes insurmountable safety issues.

 

20In the beginning, nanotechnology was

Aoverlooked as a science.

Bconsidered to be irrelevant.

Chighly unpopular.

Dregarded as being revolutionary.

 

21Nanoparticles are a product of

Amanufacturing processes alone.

Bnatural and manufactured processes.

Cpurely biological processes.

Denvironmental factors alone.

 

22Nanotechnology remained a purely theoretical science until

Aother technologies caught up with it.

Bscientists were better able to understand its practical applications.

CTaniguchi convinced other scientists of its practical value.

Da scientist invented a new technology.

 

23Safety concerns about nanotechnology are

Acompletely unfounded.

Bexaggerated by its detractors.

Creal but manageable.

Dmisunderstood.

 

Questions 24-26

Complete the sentences.

Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.

A major 24 _________________ in the field of nanotechnology came with the discovery of fullerenes and the invention of the Scanning Tunnelling Microscope.

Amongst scientists, nanotechnology has not met with 25 _________________

The ability of nanoparticles to penetrate 26 _________________ is somewhat of a mixed blessing,

 

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