Argentina
According to the Argentine Foundation of Nanotechnology (FAN), "The properties of matter change when we go from a macroscopic scale to the nanoscopic scale... At the nanoscale the intensive properties (color, melting point, density, electrical and thermal conductivity, etc.) change surprisingly, they do not depend on the amount of matter. For example, silver, which on different scales acquires different colors."[61].
On the other hand, nanosciences according to the School of Nanosciences and Nanotechnologies[62] of Argentina, unlike nanotechnologies, address the study and explanation of the fundamental and technological aspects of the physical, chemical and/or biological properties and processes that emerge in systems and materials at the nanoscale; In addition to the different techniques, calculations and tools for the manufacture and control of nanosystems.
Since the beginning of the 2000s, this technology has experienced strong growth throughout the world, based on the manufacture of a large number of products benefiting from its contributions. In this context, our country has developed an ecosystem of research groups, companies and other public and private actors that have worked and are working in that same direction.[63].
In March 2004, the first national workshop on nanosciences and nanotechnologies was held in the then Secretariat of Science, Technology and Productive Innovation (SECyT), and currently the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation.
It is in 2005 that the State announced the creation of the Argentine Nanotechnology Foundation (FAN), which is still active today and is a very important pillar in the development and production of Nanotechnology in Argentina.
Considered a general-purpose technology for its ability to offer innovations to very dissimilar industries such as medicine, food and electronics, nanotechnology has become a relevant field in the scientific and technological development of countries and Argentina is no exception. Currently, the country has 335 groups in 91 science and technology institutes that develop lines of research on the subject and, in turn, according to the survey carried out, there are 73 national companies that market products or processes with their contributions or are in the process of doing so.
The range of options is really very wide, in Argentina for example, there are companies that manufacture dental implants with bio nanomaterials, face masks with silver and copper nanoparticles, healthy foods enriched with biodegradable organic nanomaterials or sustainable inputs for agricultural production. To those actors that constitute part of the ecosystem, others join to enhance them; Among them are technological linkage units, incubators, universities and public organizations that also play a key role in its development.
Geographically, the distribution of institutions that participate in the development of nanotechnology in Argentina is concentrated in the central provinces and specifically in large cities such as Capital Federal, Córdoba "Córdoba (Argentina)"), Río Cuarto "Río Cuarto (city)"), Santa Fe "Santa Fe (Argentina)"), Rosario "Rosario (Argentina)"), Mendoza "Mendoza (Argentina)"), La Plata, Mar del Plata and White Bay. Although these are the main places, there are also institutes with their research groups and in some cases companies in the northern and southern provinces of the country, mainly in Bariloche and San Miguel de Tucumán, among other cities.[63].
Conventional optical microscopes, such as those we can find in the laboratories of primary and secondary educational institutions, are obsolete. Currently, there are very useful tools, high-resolution microscopes, such as the scanning electron microscope (SEM) of the University of Buenos Aires (UBA), which allows us to visualize nanometric systems, such as Cu20 (copper dioxide) nanoparticles used in the agronomist sector as a fungicide.
Argentina currently has an increase in instruments and applications of nanotechnology, where 60% of R&D is carried out by research groups in institutes and centers that are found in science and technology organizations or in universities, mostly public and some private.[64].
Already in 2011, the Laboratory of Electron Microscopy and Analysis by X-rays (LAMARX)&action=edit&redlink=1 "Laboratory of Electron Microscopy and Analysis by Astronomy, Physics and Computing (National University of Córdoba)"), belonging to the National University of Córdoba (UNC).[65].
Currently, there is also, among others, the Nanofab,[66] a laboratory for advice, incubation and public equipment services that has the participation of more than 25 institutions.
The applications of nanotechnology and nanomaterials cover all types of industrial sectors. In Argentina some of these are:
Environment: According to the FAN "Nanotek S.A.[67] proposes the use of zero-valent iron nanoparticles in underground layers for the absorption of arsenic, a substance that affects a large part of the national territory (16 provinces, 435,000 km and 2.5 million inhabitants) and involves an outlay of 14 million dollars for the budget of the public health area."
Biomedicine: The pandemic generated by Covid-19 (SARS-CoV-2) led to the creation and improvements of face masks, again using technologies developed by Nanotek S.A. which indicate that these masks: “They have silver nanoparticles that release positive ions, capable of altering the biological processes of microorganisms.”[68].
Energy: There are 22 groups in Argentina aimed at producing new materials with greater efficiency for use in the energy sector, for example in the components of wind mills (improve their resistance and reduce their weight) and solar panels (semiconductors capable of capturing more solar energy).[69].