Nanotechnology – UPSC Notes

Nanotechnology | UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS Bangalore
GS-III · Science & Technology · Innovation · Environment · Health

Nanotechnology — Meaning, Applications, Benefits & Concerns ⚛️

Complete UPSC Notes — What nanotechnology is and why size matters at the nanoscale, types of nanomaterials (graphene, MXenes, lipid nanoparticles, CNTs, quantum dots), sector-wise applications (health, energy, agriculture, defence), India's Nano Mission (2007), INST Mohali, India-specific achievements (Tata Swach, Covaxin, IIT innovations), current affairs 2024–2026, concerns (toxicity, regulation, ethics), PYQs, and interactive MCQs.

⚛️ Scale: 1–100 nanometres (1 nm = 10⁻⁹ m) India: Nano Mission (2007, DST) — Rs. 1,000 crore Phase I 🇮🇳 INST Mohali: Jan 3, 2013 | India = 12% global nano publications (2024) 🇮🇳 Tata Swach (nano-silver + rice husk ash) | Covaxin nanotech platform Global market: ~$8.78B (2025) → ~$115B by 2034 at 33% CAGR Richard Feynman: "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom" (1959)
📚 Legacy IAS — Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  ·  Updated: April 2026  ·  Facts Verified
Section 01 — Foundation

⚛️ What is Nanotechnology? — The Science of the Impossibly Small

💡 The "Football Field to a Marble" Analogy

A nanometre (nm) is one-billionth of a metre (10⁻⁹ m). To visualise: if a marble were scaled up to the size of the Earth, a nanometre would be roughly the size of the original marble. A human hair is approximately 80,000–100,000 nm wide. A red blood cell is about 7,000 nm. A DNA double helix is about 2 nm wide. The entire power of nanotechnology lies in this extreme smallness — at this scale, the quantum world takes over and materials behave completely differently from their bulk forms. Gold, normally shiny and golden, appears red or purple as nanoparticles. Carbon, normally a soft conductor (graphite) or hard insulator (diamond), becomes the world's strongest and most conductive material (graphene) as a single atomic layer. This size-dependent transformation of properties is the heart of nanotechnology.

📌 Definition (UPSC-Ready): Nanotechnology is the science, engineering, and application of materials and devices with structures and components at the nanoscale — typically between 1 and 100 nanometres (nm) — where size-dependent phenomena enable novel properties and functions distinctly different from those at larger scales. The term was coined by Norio Taniguchi (1974); the theoretical foundation was laid by physicist Richard Feynman in his famous 1959 lecture "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom." Practical breakthroughs became possible after the invention of the Scanning Tunnelling Microscope (STM) by Binnig and Rohrer (IBM, 1981 — Nobel 1986) and the Atomic Force Microscope (AFM).
Why Size Matters: Surface Area Effect

As a material is broken into smaller pieces, its surface area to volume ratio increases dramatically. A 1 cm cube has a surface area of 6 cm². Break it into 10 nm cubes: surface area jumps to 600 m². More surface = more atoms exposed = more reactive. This is why nano-silver kills bacteria far more effectively than bulk silver, and nano-catalysts work at far lower temperatures than their bulk equivalents.

Example: A gram of nano-platinum has the surface area of a tennis court — making it an ultra-effective catalyst for fuel cells.
Why Size Matters: Quantum Effects

At the nanoscale, classical physics gives way to quantum mechanics. Electrons' behaviour is governed by quantum confinement — they can only occupy discrete energy levels, causing materials to absorb and emit light at specific wavelengths determined purely by particle size. This makes quantum dots "tuneable" — change particle size, change the colour of light emitted. Gold nanoparticles absorb different wavelengths than bulk gold, appearing red/purple.

Example: Quantum dots — 2 nm emits blue light, 6 nm emits red. Used in QLED TVs, medical imaging, and solar cells — all by adjusting size alone.
Why Size Matters: Mechanical Properties

Nanostructured materials have fewer defects (dislocations, grain boundaries) per unit volume than bulk materials — making them dramatically stronger. Nano-grains of metals can be 3–10× stronger than coarse-grained equivalents. Carbon nanotubes have tensile strength ~100 times greater than steel at one-sixth the weight. Graphene, just one atom thick, is the strongest material ever measured — ~200 times stronger than steel.

Example: Carbon nanotube-reinforced composites used in Boeing 787 Dreamliner reduce aircraft weight by ~20%, improving fuel efficiency.
📌 How Nano Scales Compare — Fixing It in Memory:
1 nm = 10⁻⁹ m  ·  Water molecule: ~0.3 nm  ·  DNA helix: ~2 nm  ·  Protein (haemoglobin): ~5 nm  ·  Virus: ~10–100 nm  ·  Bacterium: ~1,000–10,000 nm  ·  Red blood cell: ~7,000 nm  ·  Human hair: ~80,000 nm
Nanotechnology operates in the space between individual molecules and the smallest living cells.
Section 02 — The Building Blocks

🔬 Types of Nanomaterials — The UPSC Essentials

💎
Graphene

A single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a two-dimensional honeycomb lattice. Discovered in 2004 by Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov (Nobel Prize 2010). The thinnest, strongest, and most conductive material known. ~200× stronger than steel; conducts electricity better than copper; conducts heat better than diamond.

2D material1 atom thick~200× steel strength Flexible electronicsBatteries/supercapacitorsWater filtrationBiosensorsTouchscreens
🌀
Carbon Nanotubes (CNTs)

Graphene sheets rolled into cylinders, typically 1–50 nm diameter. Can be single-walled (SWCNTs) or multi-walled (MWCNTs). Exceptional tensile strength (~100× steel), electrical conductivity comparable to copper, thermal conductivity better than diamond. IISc Bangalore fabricated nanoelectronic transistors using CNTs as channels — an energy-efficient alternative to silicon.

Cylindrical100× steel strengthHigh conductivity NanoelectronicsAerospace compositesDrug deliveryCO₂ capture membranes
🔮
Quantum Dots (QDs)

Semiconductor nanocrystals (2–10 nm) whose electronic properties lie between discrete molecules and bulk semiconductors. Quantum confinement makes their optical properties purely size-dependent — smaller dots emit blue light, larger dots emit red. Size-tunable optical properties without changing chemical composition.

2–10 nm semiconductor crystalsSize-tunable colour QLED TV displaysMedical imagingBiosensorsSolar cellsDrug delivery
🏔️
MXenes

Two-dimensional layered ceramic materials derived from bulk MAX phases (ternary carbides and nitrides), discovered in 2011. Chemically composed of transition metal carbides/nitrides. Outstanding electrical conductivity, high volumetric capacitance, and metallic conductivity combined with hydrophilic surfaces. The most-studied MXene is Ti₃C₂Tₓ (titanium carbide).

2D ceramicDiscovered 2011Metallic conductivity Energy storage (supercapacitors)Electromagnetic shieldingAntimicrobial applicationsCancer theranostics
💊
Lipid Nanoparticles (LNPs)

Spherical nanostructures (50–200 nm) made of ionisable lipids that form a protective shell around nucleic acids (mRNA, siRNA, DNA). The lipid shell protects cargo from enzymatic degradation and enables cellular uptake through fusion with cell membranes. Came to global prominence as the mRNA delivery system in Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines. Now being developed for personalised cancer vaccines (mRNA cancer vaccines in Phase II/III trials as of 2025).

50–200 nmmRNA carriersBiodegradable COVID-19 vaccinesCancer mRNA vaccines (clinical trials)Gene therapy
⚙️
Metal & Metal Oxide Nanoparticles

Nanoparticles of gold (Au), silver (Ag), iron oxide (Fe₃O₄), titanium dioxide (TiO₂), zinc oxide (ZnO), etc. Each metal's nanoparticle has distinct properties: Gold NPs — biocompatible, surface plasmon resonance (appears red), used in cancer theranostics; Silver NPs — potent antimicrobial (disrupts bacterial cell membranes), used in wound dressings and water purification; Iron oxide NPs — magnetic, used in MRI contrast enhancement; TiO₂ NPs — photocatalytic, used in self-cleaning surfaces.

Au: red colour, biocompatibleAg: antimicrobialFe₃O₄: magnetic Cancer diagnosis & therapyAntibacterial coatingsWater purificationMRI imaging
🧊
Fullerenes & Nanocomposites

Fullerenes (C₆₀ "Buckyballs") — spherical carbon molecules discovered 1985 (Nobel 1996); cage-like structure; used in drug delivery, photovoltaics, lubricants. Nanocomposites — two distinct components (typically a polymer matrix + nanofiller); properties superior to either component alone; some nanocomposites are up to 1,000× tougher than bulk components. Carbon nanotube-quantum dot hybrids and graphene-polymer composites are examples of composite nanomaterials.

C₆₀ cage structureUp to 1,000× tougher than bulk Drug delivery carriersStructural reinforcementEnergy storage
🧬
Dendrimers & Liposomes

Dendrimers — tree-like, branching polymer nanostructures with precisely controlled size and surface chemistry; can carry drugs in their cavities or on their surface. Liposomes — spherical lipid vesicles (25–1,000 nm); earliest nanomedicine delivery system; used in cancer chemotherapy (e.g., Doxil — liposomal doxorubicin, FDA approved 1995); highly biocompatible and biodegradable. Both are organic-based nanomaterials — biocompatible and non-toxic.

Tree-like (dendrimer)Vesicle (liposome)Biocompatible Targeted chemotherapy (Doxil)Gene transfectionVaccine adjuvants
Section 03 — Where It Works

🏭 Applications of Nanotechnology — Sector by Sector

🏥
Biomedicine & Healthcare
  • Targeted drug delivery: Nanoparticles (liposomes, dendrimers, lipid NPs) deliver drugs directly to tumour cells — reducing chemotherapy side effects by 50–80%. IIT Bombay: curcumin nanoformulation for improved bioavailability.
  • Cancer theranostics: Gold nanoparticles heated by near-infrared light selectively destroy tumour cells (photothermal therapy); simultaneously function as imaging agents.
  • Early diagnostics: Nano-biosensors detect cancer biomarkers, pathogens, and disease proteins at concentrations of parts per trillion — decades before symptoms. Gold NP-based diagnostics detect pathogens in 20 minutes.
  • mRNA vaccines (LNPs): Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines — LNPs protect mRNA from degradation, enabling the first mRNA vaccines. mRNA cancer vaccines (e.g., KEYNOTE-942 for melanoma) in Phase 2/3 trials (2024-25).
  • Tissue engineering: Nanostructured scaffolds of graphene nanoribbons support nerve cell regeneration for spinal cord injuries. Nano-hydroxyapatite for bone repair.
  • Nanorobots (future): Theoretical microscale robots to swim through blood, deliver drugs at specific cells; nanorobotics market projected at $22B by 2033.
💻
Electronics & Computing
  • Nanoelectronics: Transistors now at 2–3 nm scale (TSMC, Samsung). IISc Bangalore: CNT-based transistors as energy-efficient silicon alternatives. IIT Bombay: nanoscale logic gates for quantum computers.
  • Quantum dots in displays: QLED TVs use quantum dots to produce vivid, energy-efficient colours. Samsung leads with 10,709+ US nano patents (2025).
  • Flexible electronics: Graphene-based nanomaterials enable stretchable, bendable electronic devices — wearables, foldable phones, electronic skin.
  • Magnetic RAM (MRAM): Nanoscale magnetic memory — non-volatile, faster than flash, lower power consumption than conventional RAM.
  • Nanophotonics & 5G: Nanoantennas (gold nanostructures) enhance signal transmission for ultra-fast 5G and 6G networks.
  • AI + Nano: AI/ML algorithms now design novel nanomaterials and optimise LNP formulations; Machine Learning penetration in nanotech stacks reached 81.2% in 2024.
Energy
  • Solar cells: Nanostructured semiconductor materials (quantum dots, perovskite nanocrystals) increase photovoltaic efficiency beyond the Shockley-Queisser limit of conventional silicon cells. Kyoto University: nanotech semiconductor that doubles sunlight-to-electricity conversion.
  • Batteries & supercapacitors: Graphene and MXene electrodes — dramatically higher energy density, faster charging, longer cycle life for Li-ion batteries and supercapacitors. Key for EV revolution.
  • Fuel cells: Nano-platinum catalysts (surface area of a tennis court per gram) enable highly efficient hydrogen fuel cells — central to India's National Green Hydrogen Mission.
  • CO₂ capture: Carbon nanotube membranes selectively capture CO₂ from flue gases — 100× faster than conventional polymer membranes.
  • Wind energy: CNT-reinforced turbine blades — lighter, stronger, generate 25% more power than conventional blades.
🌿
Agriculture & Food
  • Nano-fertilisers: Slow-release nanocapsules deliver nutrients directly to plant roots — reduce fertiliser use by 30–40%, minimise nutrient runoff into waterways (SDG 14, SDG 15).
  • Nano-pesticides: Nano-encapsulated pesticides — controlled release, lower doses needed, reduced environmental persistence.
  • Nano-biosensors for agriculture: Real-time monitoring of soil pH, moisture, nutrient levels, and plant pathogen detection. Can detect crop diseases before visible symptoms — reducing crop losses.
  • Food packaging: Antimicrobial nano-silver and nano-zinc oxide coatings — extend shelf life, prevent spoilage, eliminate need for chemical preservatives.
  • Nano-herbicides: Targeted delivery reduces chemical usage while maintaining efficacy.
  • Tata Swach: India-specific example — rice husk ash impregnated with nano-silver particles purifies water from bacterial contamination without electricity, for ~Rs. 499–999.
💧
Environment & Water
  • Water purification: Graphene oxide membranes — filter salts, heavy metals, and even viruses from water; 100× more permeable than conventional membranes. IIT Madras: metal nanoparticle-based filters remove microplastics, pesticides, and heavy metals (including arsenic decontamination).
  • Nanoremediation: Nano zero-valent iron (nZVI) particles injected into contaminated soil/groundwater — chemically reduces chlorinated solvents, heavy metals, and nitrates in situ.
  • Nanosensors for pollution: Quantum dot-based sensors detect ppb levels of heavy metals (lead, arsenic, mercury) in water; CNT-based gas sensors detect air pollutants in real time.
  • Air purification: TiO₂ nanoparticles in photocatalytic air purifiers decompose NOₓ, VOCs, and pathogens when exposed to UV/visible light.
  • Anti-fouling coatings: Nano-coatings on ship hulls prevent marine organism growth — reducing drag and fuel consumption by 5–10%.
🛡️
Defence & Security
  • Lightweight armour: CNT and graphene-composite body armour — lighter than Kevlar, stronger than steel. Indian defence: nano-coatings for lightweight, durable military vehicles and equipment.
  • Stealth coatings: Nano-structured radar-absorbing materials (RAM) applied to aircraft and naval vessels to reduce radar cross-section — crucial for stealth technology.
  • Explosives detection: CNT-based chemical sensors detect trace explosives (TNT, RDX) at parts-per-trillion concentrations — used at airports and borders.
  • Anti-corrosion coatings: Nano-composite coatings on naval vessels and military hardware dramatically extend operational life.
  • Smart fabrics: Nanosensor-integrated combat uniforms that monitor soldier vital signs, detect chemical/biological agents, and automatically camouflage.
Section 04 — India's Framework

🇮🇳 India and Nanotechnology — Policy, Institutions & Achievements

📌 India's Nano Journey — Timeline at a Glance:
1989: JNCASR (Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research) founded in Bengaluru — a premier multidisciplinary research institution
2001: DST launches Nano Science and Technology Initiative (NSTI) — India's first formal nano research programme
2007: National Mission on Nano Science and Technology (Nano Mission) launched under DST — Phase I budget: Rs. 1,000 crore
2013 (Jan 3): Institute of Nano Science and Technology (INST), Mohali starts functioning — India's first dedicated nano research institute under Nano Mission
2013: Nano Mission Phase II under 12th Plan — Rs. 650 crore approved
2024: India captures 12% of global nano publications (China 31%, EU 15%, US 6%)
2025 (Budget): National Deep-Tech Policy & Fund of Funds (₹10,000 crore) for AI, robotics, and nanotechnology startups
🏛️ Nano Mission (2007) — The Policy Core
Launched: 2007 by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India.
Phase I budget: Rs. 1,000 crore; Phase II: Rs. 650 crore (12th Plan).
Governance: Steered by a Nano Mission Council (NMC) chaired by Prof. CNR Rao (JNCASR); two advisory groups: Nano Science Advisory Group (NSAG) and Nano Applications and Technology Advisory Group (NATAG).
Key goals: Basic research; infrastructure creation; human resource development; international collaborations; translation to applications.
Five Nanoscience Centres established at premier institutions to coordinate research in nanomaterials, nanodevices, and nanosystems.
ICONSAT: International Conference on NanoScience and NanoTechnology — biennial international conference held under Nano Mission.
Access to global facilities: Indian scientists gained access to Photon Factory (Tsukuba, Japan) and PETRA III (Hamburg, Germany).
Output by 2014: ~5,000 research papers and ~900 PhDs generated under Nano Mission. DSTRs. 1,000 crore Phase ICNR Rao chairs NMC
🏗️ INST Mohali (2013) — India's Nano Hub
Full name: Institute of Nano Science and Technology, Mohali, Punjab.
Established: Autonomous institution of DST; started functioning on January 3, 2013 as India's first dedicated nano research institute under the Nano Mission. Shifted to new campus in 2020.
Approach: Interdisciplinary — biologists, chemists, physicists, and materials scientists under one umbrella.
Output: ~180 research publications per year (average impact factor 4.2); two INST scientists ranked among top 2% globally; overall Nature Index rank: 32.
Translation focus: Boosting translational research (lab to industry); public and media sensitisation. Jan 3, 2013Mohali Punjab180 papers/year
🔬 India's Key Research Achievements
IISc Bangalore: Nanoelectronic transistors fabricated using carbon nanotubes as channels — an energy-efficient alternative to silicon-based transistors. Advancing India's semiconductor self-reliance goals.

IIT Bombay: (1) Logic gates using nanoscale components that can pave the way for quantum computers; (2) Curcumin nanoformulation for improved bioavailability — low-cost India-specific cancer adjuvant; (3) Surface-engineered nanoparticles for toxic metal and organic dye separation from water.

IIT Madras: Metal nanoparticle-based filters removing microplastics, pesticides, and heavy metals from water; arsenic decontamination filters for groundwater.

IIT Delhi: Antiviral nano-coatings (N9 blue nanosilver + zinc nanocomplexes) for COVID-19 masks and PPE under Nano Mission — approved by DST for scale-up.

Tata Chemicals (Tata Swach): Low-cost water purifier using rice husk ash (RHA) impregnated with nano-silver particles. No electricity needed. Priced at Rs. 499–999. Purification cost: ~10 paisa/litre. Developed by TCS TRDDC. Serves BoP (Bottom of Pyramid) market — reaching millions without piped water.

Bharat Biotech (Covaxin): Used bioinformatics, molecular modelling and nanotechnology platforms for accelerated drug discovery to develop India's first indigenous COVID-19 vaccine. IISc CNT transistorsIIT Bombay quantum gatesTata SwachCovaxin nanotech
🤝 Collaborations & Industry
International: Agreements with USA, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Israel; participation in UN agency multilateral projects.
Industry players: TCS, Bharat Biotech, Sun Pharma, Tata Chemicals, Log9 Materials, Vimano — over 30 Indian companies engaged in nano products.
Incubators: CIIE.Co (IIM Ahmedabad) and T-Hub (Telangana) backed by DST for nano startups.
CSIR-NMITLI: New Millennium Indian Technology Leadership Initiative Programme — integrating nano with industrial applications.
DBT: Active in nano-biotechnology R&D — tissue-specific drug delivery, nano-sensors for food safety.
Publications: India captures 12% of global nano research publications as of 2024 (China: 31%, EU: 15%, US: 6%). India historically ranked 3rd globally in nano publications. 12% global nano publications30+ companies
Section 05 — The Upside

✅ Benefits of Nanotechnology — Why It Matters

🏥 Healthcare Revolution

Targeted drug delivery reduces chemotherapy side effects; nano-biosensors enable ultra-early disease detection (cancer, TB, COVID); nanoparticle vaccines improve immune response; tissue engineering scaffolds restore damaged organs; mRNA vaccines (via LNPs) represent the biggest vaccine technology leap in 50 years.

India: Tata Swach serves millions without electricity; IIT Bombay curcumin nanoformulation could democratise cancer care in resource-limited settings.
💻 Technology & Computing

Nanoscale transistors (2–3 nm, TSMC) continue Moore's Law — more computing power, less energy. CNT transistors could replace silicon, enabling post-silicon computing. Quantum dots in displays reduce energy consumption by 30% vs. OLEDs. Quantum computing enabled by nanoscale qubits.

IISc Bangalore CNT transistors; IIT Bombay nanoscale logic gates — positioning India in next-generation semiconductor research.
⚡ Clean Energy & SDGs

MXene and graphene supercapacitors store 3–5× more energy than conventional capacitors — enabling better EVs and renewable energy storage. Nano-solar cells approach 30%+ efficiency vs. ~20% for conventional silicon. Nano-platinum fuel cells central to green hydrogen economy. Nanotech contributes to SDG 7 (Clean Energy), SDG 13 (Climate Action).

Log9 Materials (India): graphene-based battery technology for EVs and industrial applications — reducing reliance on lithium.
💧 Water & Food Security

Graphene membranes and nano-filters provide affordable, off-grid water purification — crucial for India's 163 million people without safe drinking water access. Nano-fertilisers reduce N₂O emissions from agriculture. Nano-biosensors in food safety prevent adulteration and contamination. Links to SDG 2 (Zero Hunger), SDG 6 (Clean Water).

Tata Swach: Rs. 499 water filter using nano-silver + RHA — 10 paisa per litre; no electricity; reaches BOP markets.
🏗️ Advanced Manufacturing

Nano-composite materials (CNT/graphene + polymer) produce aircraft components 20–30% lighter than conventional materials — reducing fuel consumption and carbon emissions. Nano-coatings on cutting tools extend life by 5–10×. Lightweight nano-armour for military applications. Self-cleaning nano-surfaces for buildings (TiO₂ photocatalysis).

Boeing 787 Dreamliner: ~50% carbon fibre composites (including nano-reinforced) reduces weight, improving fuel efficiency by ~20%.
🌱 Environment & Agriculture

Nano-remediation (nZVI particles) cleans contaminated groundwater in situ — avoiding costly excavation. Nanosensors enable real-time pollution monitoring. Nano-fertilisers reduce chemical runoff into rivers. Nano-encapsulated pesticides need lower doses — reducing harm to pollinators and soil microbiome. Contributes to SDG 14, 15.

IIT Madras: nano-filter removes arsenic from groundwater — directly applicable to India's arsenic-belt states (Bengal, Bihar, UP, Assam).
Section 06 — The Risks

⚠️ Challenges & Concerns — The Dark Side of Nano

🫁 Toxicology & Health Risks

Engineered nanoparticles can penetrate biological barriers — including the blood-brain barrier — that bulk materials cannot. Studies show inhaled nanoparticles accumulate in nasal cavities, lungs, and brain tissue. Nano-silver can damage beneficial gut bacteria. Prolonged occupational exposure to CNTs may cause lung inflammation similar to asbestos. The small size and high reactivity that make nanoparticles useful also make them potentially dangerous when uncontrolled.

Example: TiO₂ nanoparticles — widely used in sunscreens — are classified as "possibly carcinogenic to humans" (Group 2B) by IARC when inhaled in nano form, though safe topically. EU banned TiO₂ as food additive in 2022 over nano-safety concerns.

🌍 Environmental Persistence

Nanomaterials released into the environment can travel through soil, water, and air in ways bulk materials cannot. Nano-silver in clothing washes out into wastewater, killing beneficial bacteria in sewage treatment plants. Carbon nanotubes are persistent in the environment — their long-term ecological impacts are unknown. Nano-TiO₂ accumulates in aquatic sediments and may affect fish endocrine systems. India lacks comprehensive nanowaste management protocols.

Example: Silver nanoparticles from nano-enabled textiles — widely used in India — enter rivers through laundry water, potentially disrupting aquatic microbiomes that underpin fisheries.

⚖️ Regulatory Vacuum

India lacks a single dedicated regulatory authority for nanotechnology. Existing institutions (CDSCO for drugs, FSSAI for food, BIS for standards) face capacity constraints and lack nano-specific expertise. There are no mandatory nano-labelling requirements — consumers cannot tell if a product contains engineered nanomaterials. The Nano Mission's National Regulatory Framework Road-Map (NRFR-Nanotech) remains aspirational. Globally, even the EU — the most advanced regulator — is still developing comprehensive nano regulations.

India comparison: US has OSHA nano-safety guidelines; EU has REACH regulations covering nanomaterials; India has no equivalent binding framework.

🧬 Ethical & Social Concerns

Privacy: Nano-sensors embedded in consumer goods or environments could enable unprecedented surveillance. Enhancement vs. treatment: Nanoparticles that enhance human cognitive or physical performance raise equity questions — who gets access? Weaponisation: Nano-enabled autonomous weapons or "nano-dust" could cause indiscriminate harm without treaties to govern them. Digital divide: If nano-driven healthcare revolutions (mRNA vaccines, nano-diagnostics) remain confined to rich nations, global health inequality deepens.

💰 Financial & Commercialisation Barriers

India's nano R&D spending is minimal compared to USA, Japan, China, and France. Less than 5% of Indian manufacturing firms integrate nanotechnology (vs. 20%+ in advanced economies — FICCI report). India imports 80% of nanotechnology tools and equipment (DST data) — creating import dependency. High infrastructure costs (clean rooms, electron microscopes) limit access to elite institutions. Private sector engagement is limited — most nano R&D stays in government labs and IITs, rarely reaching market.

🎓 Skilled Workforce Gap

India produces less than 10% of global nanotechnology PhDs — far below the sector's needs. Nanotechnology requires interdisciplinary expertise at the intersection of physics, chemistry, biology, materials science, and engineering — rare in India's largely single-discipline educational system. Career paths in nano are not well-defined. Few undergraduate programs in nanoscience exist. Brain drain: Indian nano PhD graduates often pursue careers abroad (USA, Germany, Singapore) where industry demand and pay are higher.

⚠️ India-Specific Challenges Summary (FICCI & DST Data):
• <5% of Indian manufacturers use nanotechnology (vs. 20%+ in advanced economies)
• 80% import dependency for nanotechnology tools (DST)
• India produces <10% of global nano PhDs — severe skilled workforce deficit
• No single regulatory authority for nanotechnology in India
• Low private sector R&D — most innovation stays in government/academic labs
• R&D spending at ~0.65% of GDP (needs to be ≥1.5% for nano sector to thrive)
Section 07 — Current Affairs

📰 Current Affairs 2024–2026 (Fact-Verified)

🗞️ High-Priority Nano News for UPSC 2026

BUDGET 2025 — DEEP-TECH FUND
National Deep-Tech Policy & Fund of Funds — ₹10,000 Crore (Union Budget 2025-26): The Union Budget 2025-26 announced a National Deep-Tech Policy and a Fund of Funds of ₹10,000 crore to support startups in AI, robotics, and nanotechnology. This directly boosts India's nanotechnology startup ecosystem — enabling funding for nanocoatings, nanomedicine, nano-biosensor, and nano-energy startups. This aligns the Nano Mission with India's broader push for self-reliance (Atmanirbhar Bharat) in deep technologies. UPSC angle: Deep-tech policy; nanotechnology startups; Make in India; bridging lab-to-market gap in Indian nano R&D.
2024-25 — mRNA CANCER VACCINES (LNPs)
mRNA Cancer Vaccines Using Lipid Nanoparticles — Phase 2/3 Clinical Trials: Following the landmark success of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines (Pfizer-BioNTech's Comirnaty and Moderna's Spikevax — both using lipid nanoparticles as mRNA delivery systems), the LNP platform is now at the cutting edge of personalised cancer treatment. Key trials as of 2024-25: KEYNOTE-942 (Moderna + Merck) — mRNA-4157, a personalised cancer vaccine using LNPs for high-risk melanoma post-surgery; Phase 2 data showed significant reduction in recurrence. Autogene cevumeran (BioNTech + Genentech) — personalised mRNA neoantigen vaccine via LNPs for pancreatic cancer, showing early efficacy signals in Phase 2. Multiple Phase 2/3 trials across melanoma, colorectal cancer, and pancreatic cancer. The AI-LNP convergence is also notable — machine learning algorithms now screen thousands of lipid formulations to optimise mRNA delivery. UPSC angle: Nanotechnology in healthcare; mRNA platform; personalised medicine; GS-IV bioethics of human trials and access to nanomedicines.
2024 — GLOBAL NANO PUBLICATIONS
India Captures 12% of Global Nano Publications (2024): According to global research indices, India captured 12% of global nanotechnology research publications in 2024 — placing it third globally behind China (31%) and the EU (15%), and ahead of the USA (6%). India's nano research output has grown at 7.6% annually, driven by IITs, IISc, INST Mohali, and JNCASR. However, India's share of global nano patents is far lower — reflecting the persistent gap between publication output and commercial innovation. The Nano Mission and Deep-Tech Fund are aimed precisely at bridging this research-to-product gap. UPSC angle: India's science publication output; research vs. patents gap; need for translational nano research.
2024 — NANO MARKET GROWTH
Global Nanotechnology Market — $6.6 Billion (2024) to $115 Billion by 2034: The global nanotechnology market was valued at approximately $6.6 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $115 billion by 2034 at a CAGR of ~33% (Precedence Research, corroborated by multiple market research firms). Healthcare and pharmaceuticals represent the largest application segment (~26–30% of total). AI-powered nanotechnology is a rapidly growing sub-segment — projected at $25.7 billion by 2034. Nanosensors and nanodevices are the dominant product categories. Machine Learning penetration in nanotechnology applications reached 81.2% in 2024. Asia-Pacific — led by China, Japan, and South Korea — is the fastest-growing regional market. UPSC angle: Emerging technology markets; India's opportunity in deep-tech; convergence of AI and nanotechnology.
2024 — WATER & ENVIRONMENT
IIT Madras Nano-Filter for Arsenic and Microplastics — Ongoing Relevance: Research teams at IIT Madras have developed metal nanoparticle-based filters (including iron and copper nanoparticle composites) capable of removing microplastics, pesticides, and heavy metals — particularly arsenic — from contaminated groundwater. This has direct relevance for India's arsenic crisis: the Central Ground Water Board estimates that over 16 crore people in India are exposed to arsenic-contaminated groundwater (Bengal, Bihar, UP, Assam, Jharkhand). Arsenic causes cancers of skin, bladder, and lung with chronic exposure. Nano-filtration offers a low-cost, scalable solution without requiring complex infrastructure. UPSC angle: Nanotechnology for social good; SDG 6 (Clean Water); India-specific environmental health challenges; technology transfer from lab to village.
2024-25 — MXenes & ENERGY STORAGE
MXenes — Emerging Nano-Supercapacitor Material for India's EV Ambitions: MXenes (two-dimensional transition metal carbides/nitrides, discovered 2011) have emerged as one of the most promising nanomaterials for energy storage. Their metallic conductivity and hydrophilic surfaces enable volumetric capacitances far exceeding graphene — crucial for fast-charging supercapacitors in electric vehicles. Log9 Materials, an IIT-Roorkee spinoff backed by Amara Raja (a leading Indian battery manufacturer), is developing graphene-based and next-generation nanotech batteries for EVs and industrial applications — directly supporting India's National EV Mission (target: 30% EV sales by 2030). UPSC angle: Nanotechnology in energy; India's EV transition; battery technology; Log9 as an example of IIT-industry linkage in deep-tech.
2025 — REGULATORY DEVELOPMENTS
EU Nano Regulation as India's Benchmark — Regulatory Gap Widens: The European Union continues to advance comprehensive nanomaterial regulation under its REACH framework — including mandatory disclosure of nanomaterials in products and specific risk assessments for nano-silver, nano-TiO₂, and nano-SiO₂. The EU banned TiO₂ (E171) as a food additive in 2022 due to nano-safety concerns. In contrast, India still lacks a single regulatory authority for nanotechnology. The Nano Mission's proposed National Regulatory Framework Road-Map (NRFR-Nanotech) remains incomplete. Consumer products in India containing engineered nanomaterials have no mandatory labelling requirement. As nano-enabled consumer goods (cosmetics, food packaging, textiles, sunscreens) proliferate in Indian markets, the regulatory vacuum poses growing public health risks. UPSC angle: Science governance; precautionary principle; regulatory capacity building; India's nano policy gaps.
Section 08 — PYQs

📜 Previous Year Questions (PYQs)

🎯 UPSC PYQs — Nanotechnology & Nanomaterials

Prelims 2019 With reference to "quantum dots", which of the following statements is/are correct?
1. They are semiconductor crystals of nanoscale dimensions.
2. They can emit light of various colours depending on their size.
3. They are used for targeted drug delivery.
Select using codes: (a) 1 only (b) 1 and 2 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: (d) — 1, 2 and 3 all correct. Statement 1 ✓ — Quantum dots are semiconductor nanocrystals (2–10 nm diameter) — nanocrystals of semiconductors like CdSe, InP, CdS. Statement 2 ✓ — Quantum confinement makes colour emission size-dependent: smaller dots emit blue/green, larger dots emit red — the same material, different colour by size alone. This is unique in all of chemistry. Statement 3 ✓ — Quantum dots are being investigated for targeted drug delivery and diagnostics. Their surface can be conjugated with antibodies or targeting ligands to home in on cancer cells.
Prelims 2021 In the context of nanotechnology, what is a "carbon nanotube"? (a) A rolled-up sheet of a single layer of carbon atoms (graphene) forming a cylindrical structure. (b) A carbon molecule resembling a soccer ball with 60 atoms. (c) A carbon compound used only in drug delivery systems. (d) A synthetic polymer of carbon atoms used in textile manufacturing.
Answer: (a). A carbon nanotube (CNT) is indeed a graphene sheet rolled into a cylinder — either single-walled (SWCNT) or multi-walled (MWCNT). Option (b) is a fullerene (C₆₀, Buckminsterfullerene/Buckyball) — a separate carbon nanomaterial discovered in 1985 (Nobel Prize 1996 to Curl, Kroto, Smalley). CNTs have remarkable tensile strength (~100× steel), electrical conductivity comparable to copper, and exceptional thermal conductivity. Applications span nanoelectronics (IISc Bangalore), aerospace composites, drug delivery, and CO₂ capture membranes.
Mains 2020 (GS-III) "India has made significant progress in nanotechnology research but faces challenges in translating it to commercial applications. Discuss."
Key points for answer: India's progress: Nano Mission (2007, Rs. 1,000 crore Phase I); INST Mohali (2013); 5,000+ papers and 900+ PhDs by 2014; India captures 12% of global nano publications (2024); JNCASR, IITs, IISc achievements (CNT transistors, curcumin nanoformulation, water filters); Tata Swach (commercial nano success); Covaxin (nanotech platform). Challenges: <5% Indian manufacturers use nano (FICCI); 80% tool import dependency (DST); <10% of global nano PhDs; no single regulatory authority; low private sector R&D; weak lab-to-market pipelines; limited inter-disciplinary education. Way forward: Deep-Tech Fund ₹10,000 crore (Budget 2025); strengthen CIPAM-equivalent for nano; expand TISCs and incubators; mandatory nano education in engineering curricula; public-private partnerships; national regulatory framework.
Mains 2022 (GS-III) "Lipid nanoparticles emerged as a game-changing delivery system in the COVID-19 pandemic. Analyse their significance and broader applications in medicine."
Key points: What LNPs are: spherical lipid structures (50–200 nm) that encapsulate and protect mRNA from enzymatic degradation; enable cellular uptake via membrane fusion; ionisable lipid design allows pH-dependent release. COVID-19 vaccines: Pfizer-BioNTech (Comirnaty) and Moderna (Spikevax) — first mRNA vaccines ever approved; LNPs were the critical enabling nanotechnology. Broader significance: mRNA cancer vaccines (KEYNOTE-942 for melanoma, autogene cevumeran for pancreatic cancer — Phase 2/3 trials 2024-25); gene therapy delivery; rare disease treatment (transthyretin amyloidosis — Patisiran, first LNP-siRNA drug, FDA approved 2018). Ethical dimensions (GS-IV link): equitable access to nano-enabled vaccines; India's role as "pharmacy of the world" extended to nano-medicines; regulatory framework needed.
Prelims 2023 Which of the following correctly describes "graphene"?
1. It is a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal lattice.
2. It is 200 times stronger than steel.
3. It was first isolated in 2004, earning its discoverers the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2010.
Select: (a) 1 only (b) 1 and 2 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: (d) — 1, 2 and 3 all correct. Statement 1 ✓ — Graphene is a 2D crystal of carbon atoms in a hexagonal (honeycomb) lattice, exactly one atom thick. Statement 2 ✓ — Graphene has an intrinsic tensile strength of ~130 GPa, roughly 200× stronger than structural steel at 1/6th the weight — making it the strongest material ever tested. Statement 3 ✓ — First isolated from graphite using adhesive tape in 2004 by Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov at the University of Manchester — for which they received the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics. Additional key fact: graphene conducts electricity better than copper and heat better than diamond.
Section 09 — Practice

📝 UPSC-Style MCQs — Test Yourself

Q1Which of the following correctly identifies the range of the nanoscale, and the founding theoretical document of nanotechnology?
a) 1–1,000 nanometres; Richard Feynman's "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom" (1959)
b) 1–100 nanometres; Richard Feynman's "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom" (1959); term coined by Norio Taniguchi (1974)
c) 1–100 nanometres; Albert Einstein's 1905 paper on Brownian motion
d) 0.1–10 nanometres; Eric Drexler's "Engines of Creation" (1986)
The nanoscale is defined as 1–100 nanometres (nm) — where at least one dimension of the material falls within this range. The theoretical foundation was laid by physicist Richard Feynman in his famous 1959 lecture at Caltech titled "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom" — where he envisioned manipulating matter at the atomic scale. The term "nanotechnology" was coined by Norio Taniguchi in 1974 to describe precision machining at the nanometre level. Practical breakthroughs came with the Scanning Tunnelling Microscope (Binnig & Rohrer, 1981, Nobel 1986) and Atomic Force Microscope. Answer: (b).
Q2Consider the following statements about MXenes:
1. They are two-dimensional layered ceramic materials derived from bulk MAX phases.
2. They were first discovered in 1985 alongside fullerenes.
3. They have metallic electrical conductivity and high volumetric capacitance, making them promising for energy storage.
Which are correct?
a) 1 and 2 only
b) 1 and 3 only
c) 2 and 3 only
d) 1, 2 and 3
Statement 1 ✓ — MXenes are indeed 2D layered ceramic materials derived from MAX phases (ternary transition metal carbides, nitrides, or carbonitrides). The most-studied is Ti₃C₂Tₓ (titanium carbide). Statement 2 ✗ — MXenes were discovered in 2011 (by Yury Gogotsi and Babak Anasori's group at Drexel University) — NOT 1985. Fullerenes (C₆₀) were discovered in 1985 by Curl, Kroto, and Smalley (Nobel 1996) — a completely different nanomaterial. Statement 3 ✓ — MXenes combine metallic electrical conductivity with high volumetric capacitance — making them among the most promising materials for supercapacitors and fast-charging batteries for EVs. Answer: (b).
Q3Tata Swach — India's nano-water purifier — uses which combination of nanotechnology and material?
a) Graphene oxide membranes combined with activated charcoal
b) Carbon nanotubes embedded in polymer matrix for bacterial filtration
c) Rice husk ash (RHA) impregnated with nano-silver particles — no electricity needed, priced at Rs. 499–999
d) Quantum dot-based photocatalysis using UV light to degrade pathogens
Tata Swach was developed by TCS (Tata Research, Development and Design Centre — TRDDC) and Tata Chemicals as a low-cost water purifier for India's Bottom of Pyramid market. It uses Rice Husk Ash (RHA) impregnated with nano-silver particles. RHA (from heating rice husk) contains activated silica (reduces turbidity) and activated carbon (binds non-polar contaminants). Nano-silver provides antimicrobial action — kills bacteria by disrupting cell membranes. No electricity, no running water needed. Priced Rs. 499–999; purification cost ~10 paisa per litre. A breakthrough example of nanotechnology serving India's rural and BOP markets. Answer: (c).
Q4India's INST (Institute of Nano Science and Technology) at Mohali started functioning on which date, and under which government body is it established?
a) January 3, 2007; under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY)
b) January 3, 2013; under the Department of Biotechnology (DBT)
c) January 3, 2013; under the Department of Science and Technology (DST) as an autonomous institution under the Nano Mission
d) March 2007; under the Indian Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR)
INST (Institute of Nano Science and Technology), Mohali started its activities as India's first dedicated nano research institute on January 3, 2013. It is an autonomous institution of the Department of Science and Technology (DST), established under the Nano Mission (launched 2007). It shifted to its new campus in 2020. INST publishes ~180 research papers per year with an average impact factor of 4.2 and has an overall Nature Index rank of 32. Two of its scientists are ranked among the top 2% globally. The Nano Mission itself was chaired by Prof. CNR Rao (JNCASR). Answer: (c).
Q5Lipid Nanoparticles (LNPs) came to global prominence primarily because of their role in which technology, and what is their key function?
a) As a solar energy harvesting material in next-generation photovoltaic cells
b) As stealth coatings for military aircraft to absorb radar signals
c) As the mRNA delivery system in COVID-19 vaccines (Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna); they protect mRNA from enzymatic degradation and enable cellular uptake
d) As nano-fertilisers for precision agriculture, replacing urea in paddy cultivation
Lipid Nanoparticles (LNPs) are spherical nanostructures (50–200 nm) made of ionisable lipids. They came to global prominence as the mRNA delivery system in COVID-19 vaccines — specifically Pfizer-BioNTech's Comirnaty and Moderna's Spikevax, both using LNPs. Their key function: LNPs encapsulate and protect mRNA from enzymatic degradation in the bloodstream, and enable cellular uptake (endocytosis), allowing the mRNA to enter cells and instruct them to produce the spike protein antigen. Without LNPs, mRNA would be destroyed within seconds in biological fluids. LNPs now are being used to deliver personalised mRNA cancer vaccines (KEYNOTE-942 for melanoma; autogene cevumeran for pancreatic cancer) in Phase 2/3 clinical trials (2024-25). Answer: (c).
Q6Which of the following correctly describes India's challenges in nanotechnology, based on FICCI and DST data?
1. Less than 5% of Indian manufacturing firms integrate nanotechnology (vs. 20%+ in advanced economies).
2. India imports approximately 80% of its nanotechnology tools and equipment.
3. India produces less than 10% of global nanotechnology PhDs.
4. India ranks first globally in nanotechnology research publications.
a) 1 and 2 only
b) 1, 2 and 3 only
c) 2, 3 and 4 only
d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Statements 1 ✓, 2 ✓, and 3 ✓ are all accurately sourced: (1) FICCI report: <5% of Indian manufacturers integrate nanotech vs. 20%+ in advanced economies; (2) DST data: India imports ~80% of nanotechnology tools — a significant dependency that limits domestic nano-manufacturing capacity; (3) India produces <10% of global nano PhDs — far below its share in publications. Statement 4 ✗ — India does NOT rank first in nano publications. As of 2024, China leads with 31%, followed by EU (15%), then India at approximately 12% — placing India third globally, not first. India historically ranked 3rd (as confirmed in 2013 Nano Mission data) and maintains approximately this position. Answer: (b).
Q7The National Mission on Nano Science and Technology (Nano Mission) was launched in which year, with what Phase I budget, and under which ministry/department?
a) 2001; Rs. 500 crore; Department of Biotechnology (DBT)
b) 2007; Rs. 500 crore; Ministry of Science and Technology
c) 2007; Rs. 1,000 crore; Department of Science and Technology (DST)
d) 2013; Rs. 650 crore; Department of Science and Technology (DST)
The National Mission on Nano Science and Technology (Nano Mission) was launched in 2007 under the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India. Phase I budget was Rs. 1,000 crore. Phase II (12th Plan) budget was Rs. 650 crore (option d shows 2013 and Phase II budget — that refers to Phase II continuation, not the original launch). India's earlier nano initiative was NSTI (Nano Science and Technology Initiative) launched in 2001 by DST — option (a) shows this date but wrong budget and body. The Nano Mission is steered by the Nano Mission Council (NMC) chaired by Prof. CNR Rao. INST Mohali (January 3, 2013) was established under this mission. Answer: (c).
Section 10

🧠 Memory Aid — Lock These In

🔑 Nanotechnology — All Critical Facts for UPSC

BASICS
Nanoscale = 1–100 nm. 1 nm = 10⁻⁹ m. Feynman's lecture: "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom" (1959). Term "nanotechnology" coined: Norio Taniguchi (1974). Scanning Tunnelling Microscope: Binnig & Rohrer (IBM, 1981, Nobel 1986). Why nano is special: Surface area effect + Quantum effects + Mechanical properties.
GRAPHENE
Single atomic layer of carbon in 2D honeycomb lattice. Discovered: 2004 (Geim + Novoselov, Nobel 2010 in Physics, Univ. Manchester). Strongest material: ~200× steel. Better conductor than copper (electricity) and diamond (heat). Applications: flexible electronics, batteries, water filtration, biosensors, touchscreens.
CNTs
Graphene sheet rolled into cylinder. ~100× steel strength. High electrical + thermal conductivity. IISc Bangalore: CNT-based nanoelectronic transistors (silicon alternative). Carbon nanotube membranes for CO₂ capture. Aerospace composites (Boeing 787).
QUANTUM DOTS
Semiconductor nanocrystals (2–10 nm). Colour emission is size-dependent (smaller = blue, larger = red). QLED TVs. Medical imaging. Drug delivery. PYQ 2019 — all 3 statements correct.
MXenes
2D layered ceramic from MAX phases. Discovered: 2011 (NOT 1985 — that's fullerenes). Most studied: Ti₃C₂Tₓ. Metallic conductivity + high volumetric capacitance. Energy storage, EM shielding, antimicrobial. TRAP: MXenes ≠ Fullerenes (C₆₀, 1985, Nobel 1996).
LNPs
Lipid Nanoparticles (50–200 nm). mRNA delivery system in Pfizer-BioNTech + Moderna COVID vaccines. Protect mRNA from degradation; enable cellular uptake. Now: personalised mRNA cancer vaccines — KEYNOTE-942 (melanoma) + autogene cevumeran (pancreatic cancer) — Phase 2/3 (2024-25).
INDIA — POLICY
NSTI: 2001 (DST) → Nano Mission: 2007 (DST, Rs. 1,000 crore Phase I, Rs. 650 crore Phase II) → INST Mohali: January 3, 2013 (India's first dedicated nano institute) → Deep-Tech Fund ₹10,000 crore (Budget 2025). Nano Mission Council chaired by Prof. CNR Rao. JNCASR (Bengaluru, founded 1989).
INDIA — ACHIEVEMENTS
Tata Swach: rice husk ash + nano-silver, no electricity, Rs. 499–999, 10 paisa/litre. Covaxin: nanotech platform by Bharat Biotech. IIT Bombay: curcumin nanoformulation + CNT logic gates. IIT Madras: nano-filter for arsenic/microplastics/heavy metals. IISc: CNT transistors. IIT Delhi: antiviral nano-silver coatings for masks (COVID).
INDIA — STATS
India = 12% global nano publications (2024; China 31%, EU 15%, US 6%). Historically 3rd globally. <5% manufacturers use nano (FICCI). 80% tool import dependency (DST). <10% global nano PhDs. No single regulatory authority for nano in India.
GLOBAL MARKET
~$6.6 billion (2024) → projected $115 billion by 2034 at ~33% CAGR. Largest sector: healthcare/pharma (~26-30%). AI in nanotech ML penetration: 81.2% (2024). Nanorobotics market: $22B by 2033. North America leads (39%); Asia-Pacific fastest growing.
TRAPS
• Feynman lecture = 1959 (not 1974 — that's Taniguchi coining the term). • Graphene Nobel = 2010 (Physics); Fullerene Nobel = 1996 (Chemistry). • MXenes discovered 2011 (not 1985 — that's fullerenes). • India = 3rd in nano publications (NOT 1st; China leads). • Nano Mission Phase I = Rs. 1,000 crore (Phase II = Rs. 650 crore). • INST Mohali = January 3, 2013.
Section 11

❓ FAQs — Concept Clarity

Why are nanomaterials so different from their bulk counterparts? What makes them special?
Three fundamental reasons explain why nanomaterials behave completely differently from bulk materials of the same chemical composition: (1) Surface Area Effect: As particle size decreases, the ratio of surface atoms to interior atoms increases dramatically. A 1 cm cube of gold has negligible surface area relative to its bulk. Break it into 10 nm particles and virtually every atom is on the surface — extremely reactive and catalytically active. This is why nano-gold (red/purple in colour) is a better catalyst and biosensor than bulk gold (yellow, relatively inert). (2) Quantum Confinement: Electrons in nanoscale materials have quantised (discrete) energy levels rather than the continuous energy bands of bulk materials. This changes electrical conductivity, optical properties (colour), and magnetic behaviour fundamentally. Quantum dots exploit this — change particle size, change electron energy levels, change the emitted light colour. (3) Mechanical Effects: Smaller particles have fewer crystal defects per unit volume, making them much stronger. Fewer dislocations mean more resistance to deformation. This is why nano-grained metals can be 3–10× stronger than coarse-grained metals of identical composition.
What is the difference between graphene, carbon nanotubes, and fullerenes? How are they related?
All three are carbon-based nanomaterials — allotropes of carbon at the nanoscale — but structurally very different: Graphene: a flat, 2D honeycomb lattice of carbon atoms, exactly one atom thick. Think of it as an infinite sheet. Discovered 2004; Nobel 2010 (Physics). Strongest material known, best conductor of electricity and heat. Carbon Nanotubes (CNTs): a graphene sheet rolled into a cylinder (like rolling a paper into a tube). Can be single-walled (SWCNT) or multi-walled (MWCNT). Discovered by Sumio Iijima (1991). Exceptional tensile strength and conductivity. IISc Bangalore uses CNTs for transistors. Fullerenes (C₆₀): carbon atoms arranged in a closed spherical cage resembling a soccer ball — 60 carbon atoms (sometimes more: C₇₀, C₈₀). Discovered 1985; Nobel 1996 (Chemistry) to Curl, Kroto, Smalley. Often called "Buckyballs." Used in drug delivery, lubricants, photovoltaics. Relationship: Graphene is the parent structure. Roll it → CNT. Wrap it into a sphere → Fullerene. All are pure carbon but with radically different properties due to geometry.
How does nanotechnology connect to India's SDG commitments and priority sectors?
Nanotechnology has direct, concrete contributions to India's SDG commitments across multiple goals: SDG 3 (Good Health): Nano-drug delivery reduces cancer chemotherapy side effects; LNP-based vaccines (COVID-19, future cancer vaccines) improve vaccine efficacy; nano-biosensors enable early disease detection for TB, cancer, and infectious diseases — critical for India's disease burden. SDG 6 (Clean Water): Graphene and nano-silver filters for water purification (Tata Swach); IIT Madras nano-filters for arsenic removal — directly addressing India's arsenic crisis affecting 16 crore people. SDG 7 (Clean Energy): Nano-enhanced solar cells and MXene supercapacitors support India's 500 GW renewable energy target by 2030; nano-catalysts for green hydrogen (National Green Hydrogen Mission). SDG 2 (Zero Hunger): Nano-fertilisers and nano-biosensors for precision farming — reducing input costs for small farmers while maintaining/improving yields. SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation, Infrastructure): Nanocomposites for lighter infrastructure materials; nano-semiconductors supporting India's semiconductor mission (Semicon India). SDG 13 (Climate Action): CNT membranes for CO₂ capture; nano-insulation materials reducing building energy consumption. The Deep-Tech Fund (₹10,000 crore, Budget 2025) is India's latest policy response to accelerate nanotechnology's SDG contributions.
What are the ethical concerns about nanotechnology that are relevant for UPSC GS-IV?
Nanotechnology raises several ethical issues that connect directly to GS-IV's ethics, integrity, and governance domain: (1) Precautionary Principle: Should nano-products be commercially deployed before long-term safety studies are complete? The precautionary principle (do no harm) argues for regulation even under uncertainty. But strict precaution may block beneficial innovations. India's regulatory vacuum fails this test. (2) Informed Consent and Right to Know: Consumers have a right to know if products contain engineered nanomaterials. Without mandatory nano-labelling (absent in India), consumers cannot exercise informed choice — violating autonomy. (3) Equity and Access: If nano-enabled medicines (personalised cancer vaccines, targeted therapies) are accessible only to wealthy patients in rich nations, they exacerbate global health inequalities. India, as the "Pharmacy of the World," has a responsibility to ensure nanomedicines are accessible. (4) Dual Use: Nano-enabled technologies can be weaponised — nano-dust for biological agents, stealth coatings for weapons, nano-sensors for mass surveillance. The "dual use" dilemma is acute: the same technology that protects (antiviral nano-coatings) can harm (nano-weapons). (5) Environmental Justice: Nano-manufacturing workers and communities near nano-waste sites bear disproportionate exposure risks — often lower-income communities with limited political voice. (6) Human Enhancement Ethics: If nanoparticles can enhance cognitive or physical performance beyond normal human range, questions of fairness in competition (sports, exams, work) arise. These ethical dimensions make nanotechnology relevant not just for GS-III (science and technology) but equally for GS-IV (ethics in governance and technology policy).
What is the "Grey Goo" scenario — and is it a realistic concern?
The "Grey Goo" scenario is a theoretical existential risk first described by nanotechnology pioneer Eric Drexler in his 1986 book Engines of Creation. It imagines self-replicating nanobots — molecular machines programmed to replicate themselves using available matter — running out of control and converting all matter on Earth into copies of themselves, producing a "grey goo" of identical nanomachines. For UPSC purposes: Is it realistic? The scientific consensus is that it is not a near-term practical concern. True molecular-scale self-replication of the kind required is extraordinarily difficult — current nanotechnology (engineered nanoparticles, nano-films, nano-devices) is nowhere near autonomous self-replication. Even hypothetically, self-replicating nanobots would need to solve enormously complex engineering challenges — finding nutrients, managing energy, replicating complex molecular machinery. Why it matters for UPSC: The Grey Goo scenario represents the broader category of speculative but non-zero catastrophic risks from emerging technologies — relevant for governance frameworks around emerging technologies. It illustrates why proactive, anticipatory regulation (risk governance) is important before technologies mature. The more realistic near-term concerns are the regulatory and toxicology issues covered in concerns section — not Grey Goo.
Section 12

🏁 Conclusion — UPSC Synthesis

⚛️ From Richard Feynman's Vision to India's Deep-Tech Future

In 1959, Richard Feynman stood before a room of physicists and dared them to imagine a world where we could arrange atoms one by one — where the limits of fabrication were set by nature's own rules, not our engineering traditions. Sixty-six years later, that world is here: transistors at 2 nm scale power our smartphones, lipid nanoparticles carrying mRNA are defeating COVID-19 and hunting cancers, graphene membranes filter drinking water in resource-scarce communities, and nano-silver helps an Indian family in rural Bihar drink clean water for 10 paise a litre without electricity. Nanotechnology is no longer science fiction — it is deeply woven into medicine, energy, water, food, and defence.

India's journey — from the Nano Science and Technology Initiative (2001) to the Nano Mission (2007, Rs. 1,000 crore), INST Mohali (2013), and the Deep-Tech Fund (₹10,000 crore, Budget 2025) — reflects serious institutional commitment. India's 12% share of global nano publications places it third worldwide. IISc, IIT Bombay, IIT Madras, and IIT Delhi have produced genuine innovations. Yet the gap between research excellence and commercial deployment remains India's greatest nanotechnology challenge: less than 5% of Indian manufacturers use nanotechnology (FICCI), 80% of tools are imported (DST), and the regulatory framework remains a patchwork. The paradox of being among the world's top nano-publishing nations while importing most nano-equipment must be urgently resolved.

For UPSC Prelims: Nanoscale = 1–100 nm; Feynman 1959 lecture; term coined by Taniguchi 1974; Graphene = 2D carbon, Nobel 2010, ~200× steel; MXenes = 2D ceramic, discovered 2011 (NOT 1985); Quantum dots = semiconductor crystals, size-tunable colour; LNPs = mRNA delivery in COVID-19 vaccines (Pfizer + Moderna), now cancer vaccines; Fullerenes C₆₀ = Nobel 1996; CNTs = rolled graphene sheets; Nano Mission = 2007 DST Rs. 1,000 crore; INST Mohali = Jan 3 2013; India = 3rd in nano publications (12%); Tata Swach = nano-silver + RHA, no electricity; Covaxin = nanotech platform; INST CNR Rao chairs council; NSTI = 2001; Deep-Tech Fund ₹10,000 crore (Budget 2025).
For UPSC Mains (GS-III): Why nanotechnology properties differ at nanoscale (surface area + quantum + mechanical); sector-wise applications with India-specific examples; India policy framework (NSTI → Nano Mission → INST → Deep-Tech Fund); achievements (Tata Swach, Covaxin, IIT innovations) vs. challenges (regulatory vacuum, 80% import dependency, 5% manufacturer adoption, skilled workforce gap, low private R&D); ethical concerns (GS-IV link: precautionary principle, dual use, equity, informed consent); SDG connections (SDG 3/6/7/2/9/13); mRNA cancer vaccines via LNPs as frontier application.

Book a Free Demo Class

April 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
Categories

Get free Counselling and ₹25,000 Discount

Fill the form – Our experts will call you within 30 mins.