CONFERENCE ANNOUNCEMENT:
5th Annual Conference on
FOUNDATIONS OF NANOSCIENCE:
SELF-ASSEMBLED ARCHITECTURES AND DEVICES (FNANO08)

DATES of FNANO08: April 22 – 25,
2008
SUBMISSION
DEADLINE:
January 29, 2008
FNANO08
Announcement: [PDF] [TXT] [HTML] http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/FNANO08/FNANO08announce.pdf
FNANO08 Webpage: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/
FNANO08 Preliminary Schedule
(may be updated):
LOCATION: Snowbird Cliff Lodge, Snowbird, Utah
HOTEL Accommodations: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/venue.html
FNANO08 Conference
Registration pages <to be posted> (Registration will be open starting
February 1, 2008, and the deadline for early registration is March 1, 2008.)
SUPPORTING ORGANIZATIONS: Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR), ACS Publications (ACS
Nano), and Nanorex, Inc.
SPONSORING SOCIETY: International
Society For Nananoscale Science, Computation and Engineering (ISNSCE).
PAPER
and POSTER SUBMISSIONS:
http://fnano08.cs.duke.edu/submit/
¯SUBMISSION DEADLINE: January 29,
2008
¯SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS: If you
wish to present a talk or poster at FNANO08, you need to submit by January 29, 2008 an
extended abstract of at least one page in PDF format. Even if your talk is
invited, you still need to submit at least a one page abstract by this date.
¯SUBMISSION METHOD: Submissions are electronic via a Web interface
at the above Paper and Poster Submission Website. Please make sure you have a
browser that supports uploading via a web form.
Acceptance/Rejection
DECISIONS: determined by February 22, 2008
DEADLINE
for Uploading ACCEPTED PAPERS
(for invited talks & accepted submitted papers and posters for publication
in the Conference Proceedings):
March 15, 2008. See below
for more information on the Conference Proceedings.
CONFERENCE FORMAT: A combination of:
¤
invited
and contributed talks, and
¤
posters
and open discussion periods.
FNANO Conference Overview: This is a yearly conference on foundations of
nanoscience, maintaining the highest scientific standards. Self-assembly is the
central theme of the conference. Topics include self-assembled architectures
and devices, at scales ranging from nano-scale to meso-scale. Methodologies
include both experimental as well as theoretical approaches. The conference spans many traditional
disciplines including chemistry, biochemistry, physics, computer science,
mathematics, and various engineering disciplines including MEMS.
The prior year's
Conferences on Foundations of Nanoscience (FNANO04, FNANO05, FNANO06 and FNANO07) had a
significant impact on the emerging fields of Nanoscience and Self-assembly –
they brought many of the leading nanoscientists and researchers working in a
wide variety of areas of Self-assembly in the same place to present invited
talks. This yearÕs 5th Conference on Foundations of Nanoscience (FNANO08) will have a mixture of
both as invited talks by distinguished nanoscientists as well as contributed
posters and open discussion periods to enhance attendee interaction with the
goal of creating vibrant intellectual community in the area of self-assembly. We are
including a number of special tracks on topics of emerging interest to the
community of self-assembly.
Co-Located
NanoEngineer-1 Workshop (7
PM - 8:30 PM April 23)
¤
Workshop Chair: Mark Sims <mark@nanorex.com>, Nanorex, Inc., Bloomfield Hill, MI
á
A 90 minute hands-on workshop covering the DNA
modeling, visualization and analysis capabilities of NanoEngineer-1 software for
modeling and design of DNA nanostructures. Participants are expected to bring
their own laptop.
FNANO08 CONFERENCE ORGANIZATION:
FNANO08 General Chair: John H. Reif <
>,
Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC
FNANO08 Program Chair:
¤
Paul S. Weiss
<stm@psu.edu>, Departments of Chemistry and Physics, Pennsylvania State
University, University Park, PA
FNANO08 Program Committee: Track Chairs
Track on Biomedical
Nanotechnology:
¤
Description: Talks & posters in this track present
biomedical applications of nanoscience.
¤
Track
Chair: Carston R. Wagner <wagne003@tc.umn.edu>, Department of
Medicinal Chemistry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN
¤
Track coChair: Thomas LaBean
<thl@cs.duke.edu>, Department of Computer Science, Duke
University, Durham, NC
Track
on Top-down Meets Bottom-up:
¤
Description: Talks & posters in this track combine
bottom-up self-assembly with top-down methods such as lithography or an
external patterning force (e.g., electromagnetic field or chemical gradient).
¤ Track Chair: Marya Lieberman <mlieberm@nd.edu>,
Department of
Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN
Track on Nanoplasmonics & Nanophotovoltaics:
¤
Track
Chair: Eray Aydil
<aydil@tc.umn.edu>, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials
Science,, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN
(Special) Track on Cluster-Assembled Materials:
¤
Track
Chair: Paul S. Weiss
<stm@psu.edu>, Departments of Chemistry and Physics, Pennsylvania State
University, University Park, PA
Track on Principles and Theory of Self-Assembly:
¤
Track
Chair: Max Garzon <mgarzon@memphis.edu>, Department of
Computer Science, The University of Memphis, Memphis, TN
¤
Track
CoChair: Natasha Jonoska
<jonoska@tarski.math.usf.edu>, Department of Mathematics, University of
South Florida, FL
Track on Computational Tools for Self-assembly:
¤
Track
Chair: Mark Sims
<mark@nanorex.com>, Nanorex, Inc., Bloomfield
Hill, MI
Track on Self-Assembled DNA Nanostructures:
¤
Track
Chair: Nadrian
Seeman <ncs1@feynman.acf.nyu.edu>, Department
of Chemistry, New York University, New York, NY
¤
Track
CoChair: Hao Yan
<hao.yan@asu.edu>, Center for Single Molecule Biophysics, The Biodesign
Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ
Track on Self-Assembled Surface Chemistry:
¤
Track
Chair: Lloyd Smith
<smith@chem.wisc.edu>, Department of
Chemistry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
¤
Track
CoChair: Paul Weiss
<stm@psu.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Pennsylvania State University,
University Park, PA
Track on Viral Self-Assembly:
¤
Track
Chair: Adam Zlotnick
<adam-zlotnick@ouhsc.edu>, Dept of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology,
University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, OK
Track
on Self-Assembly of Peptide-Protein Nanostructures
¤
Track
Chair: Mehmet Sarikaya <sarikaya@u.washington.edu>, Materials
Science and Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Track on
Self-Assembly Across Scales:
¤
Track
Chair: Karl Bohringer
<karl@ee.washington.edu>, Department of
Electrical Engineering, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA
¤
Track
CoChair: Babak Amir Parviz <babak@ee.washington.edu>, Department
of Electrical Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Track on
Self-assembled Computer
Circuit and System Architectures:
¤
Track
Chair: Philip J. Kuekes
<kuekes@hpl.hp.com>, Hewlett-Packard
Corporation, Palo Alto, CA
¤
Track
CoChair: Chris
Dwyer <dwyer@ece.duke.edu>, Dept of Electrical & Computer Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC
Track on Molecular Motors:
¤
Track
Chair: Andrew Turberfield
<a.turberfield@physics.ox.ac.uk>, Department
of Physics, Oxford University, Oxford, UK
Track on Fullerene Nanostructures:
¤
Track
Chair: Jie Liu
<j.liu@duke.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Duke University, Durham, NC
PROGRAM TRACK CHAIRS RESPONSIBILITIES: Paper solicitation, Paper refereeing
and acceptance decisions for papers in their track (in consultation with the
Program Chair).
FNANO CONFERENCE DESCRIPTION: The construction of structures in
the 1 ‑ 100 nanometer range with molecular-scale precision is
one of the key challenges facing science and technology in the twenty-first
century. This challenge is at the core of the emerging discipline of
Nanoscience, which is at a critical stage of development. There have been some
notable successes in the construction of individual molecular components (e.g., carbon nanotubes, and various
molecular electronic devices), and the individual manipulation of molecules by
probing devices. However, a key deficiency is the lack of methods for
constructing complex devices out of large numbers of these molecular
components. We need methods to help us hold, shape, assemble, and test various
molecular components into complex machines and systems.
Top-down methods for
construction of nanostructures, such as e-beam lithography, have inherent
limitations in scale. Bottom-up methods appear to have no such scale
limitations. Self-assembly is a bottom-up method of construction where
substructures are spontaneously self-ordered into superstructures driven by the
selective affinity of the substructures. While top-down methods are well
understood, and widely used in engineering and manufacturing processes,
self-assembly is a much less well-understood construction process. Chemists have used self-assembly
methods for many decades (e.g.,
for the self-assembly of lipid or polymer layers), but they conventionally
result in structures with limited complexity, and are not readily programmable.
However, the cell is self-assembled, and contains many complex structured
components.
A
missing pillar in the emerging discipline of Nanoscience is an understanding of
self-assembly methods for forming complex structured components. For a variety
of historical reasons, self-assembly processes and experiments have not been
examined by science to the degree that is now needed by Nanoscience. The
Conference provides synergy for a community of scholars working in
self-assembly-related areas who would otherwise not have contact with each
other.
Plans for Special Journal Issues of FNANO Papers: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/journals.html
CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS:
FNANO
Conference Proceedings: The Conference
Proceedings will be published in hard copy as well as an electronic book by an
electronic publisher. Both printed and electronic versions of the proceedings
will be subsequently available by commercial book venders. A hard copy of the
Conference Proceedings will also be provided to registered Conference
attendees. Both printed and electronic (CD-ROM and download) versions of this
year's FNANO08 Proceedings and will also be available for purchase. Submitted papers can be either a full
paper or an extended abstract, at the authorÕs option. The
proceedings will include, for each invited or contributing speaker, a paper or
extended abstract ranging in length between one and approximately 12 pages
(maximum length and format to be determined). The Proceedings will also include
a one to five page abstract for each poster.
Conference
Proceedings Paper Format Instructions: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/FNANO08/instructions.html
JOURNAL SPECIAL ISSUES: Selected conference papers will be invited to special
issues of various journals to be determined.
Concurrent NSF Workshop: to be determined
Obtaining prior year's FNANO Proceedings: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/FNANOproceedings.html
FNANO08
Proceedings will be available for purchase via a publisher to be determined.
Prior
FNANO07 Conference: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/FNANO07
Prior
FNANO06 Conference: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/FNANO06
Prior
FNANO05 Conference: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/FNANO05
Prior
FNANO04 Conference: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/FNANO04
FNANO04,
FNANO05, FNANO06, and FNANO07 Proceedings are available for purchase at: http://sciencetechnica.com/.
CONFERENCE VENUE:
The Conference will be at the Snowbird Cliff Lodge, Snowbird,
Utah. It is 20 miles from Salt Lake International Airport.
HOTEL
ACCOMMODATIONS:
CUT-OFF
DATE for Snowbird Hotel Room Reduced Rates: March 1,
2008.
We
have negotiated the following considerably reduced rates for hotel rooms at Snowbird: one hundred Rooms will be $106.60/night
at the Snowbird Cliff
Lodge, where the Conference Sessions are held. There may also be rooms at
similar rates at the Lodge at Snowbird
(8 minutes walk from Snowbird Cliff Lodge). The reduced rates are generally
available for the dates April 21 - April 26, 2008
to allow for an extended stay. Reservations with these discount rates are
available for booking by calling 800-453-3000 or 801-742-2222. Be sure to
specify that you attending the "Foundations of Nanoscience (FNANO)"
Conference to ensure that you are not charged a higher rate. The rooms at
either of these hotels are quite spacious and comfortable. Book early to get
the reduced rates. Space is limited; rooms may NOT be available after March 1,
2008.
FACILITIES:
The facilities at Snowbird include
multiple restaurants, swimming pools & hot tubs, athletic spa, skating rink
and world-class skiing. (In addition to the main ski slopes, there is also a
beginner's skiing slope that is free at night. There is also free all day
skiing for any children with a parent that purchases a ski ticket.)
TRANSPORTATION
TO AND FROM AIRPORT: A Canyon Transport van to Snowbird from the Airport baggage claim
area costs $64 roundtrip (if prebooked for regularly scheduled times) and takes
40 minutes. You can make reservations at 801-742-340 or (800) 255-1841. The
road up though Little Cottonwood Canyon to Snowbird
is rarely closed for snow removal, but this can occur very occasionally in the
evening during a very large snowstorm, and also rarely for a period in the
morning afterward. Although these events are unlikely, just in case, we
strongly suggest you arrive early
to avoid possible problems and to enjoy the beautiful surroundings.