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Fifth International Conference on
Computational Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
May 8 - 12, 2005
Anaheim Marriott & Convention Center
Anaheim, California, U.S.A.
An Interdisciplinary Integrative Forum on
Nanotechnology Computational Efforts in the Biology,
Chemistry, Physics and Materials fields.
Confirmed Speakers
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Nanotechnology at Motorola Labs
Vida Ilderem, Motorola, US (speaker biography) |
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Emerging Nanoelectronic Devices and their Benchmarking Methodology
Robert Chau, Intel Corporation, US (speaker biography) |
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Semiconductor Nanowires for Future Nanoelectronics
Lars Samuelson, Lund University, SE |
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Simulation of Nanostructured Fluids, Soft Materials, and Self-Assembly
Toshihiro Kawakatsu, Tohoku University, JP |
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Emerging Technologies and Corporate Investment
Keith R. Larson, Intel Capital, US
(speaker biography) |
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Nanotechnology and Transcending Moore's Law
Steve Jurvetson, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, US
(speaker biography) |
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Electronics and Optoelectronics with Single Carbon Nanotubes
Phaedon AvourisIBM, US |
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Recent Applications of Mesoscale Modeling to Nanotechnology and Drug Delivery
Amitesh Maiti, Accelrys, San Diego, US (speaker biography) |
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Multi-scale simulations of Personal Care Products
Fiona Case, Case Scientific, US and Hans Fraaije, University of Leiden, NL |
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Industry Symposia
Announcement and Call for Participation
The largest gathering in the field worldwide, ICCN is the premier technical forum for presenting the latest research and development in computational methods, tools and applications in the biology, chemistry, physics and materials fields.
The Nanotech 2005 Meeting, ICCN and MSM Conferences will be held at the Anaheim Marriott and Convention Center, Anaheim, California, U.S.A. Located in the heart of the exciting Anaheim Resort - sizzling with new attractions and entertainment such as the Disneyland© Resort featuring two magical theme parks, the property offers an outdoor promenade exploding with new restaurants, theatres, and shopping in a tropical setting of majestic palm trees, lush foliage, and vibrant flowers.
The conference will start Sunday late afternoon with registration and reception, and adjourn Thursday afternoon. Technical sessions run Monday through Thursday. Exhibits are open Monday through Tuesday.
The conference Technical Proceedings, consisting of articles submitted by authors of both oral and poster presentations will, be distributed to participants at registration.
In addition to the Technical Program, an exciting series of Social Events are being prepared to allow attendees ample opportunity to interact socially and enjoy the sights and sounds of the Anaheim Resort.
Objectives
With the continued miniaturization and blending of technologies, advanced computational techniques in the nano and micro regimes are paramount in the advancement of all high technology regardless of its traditional domain. The ICCN provides a forum for the interdisciplinary blending of computational efforts in biology, chemistry, physics and materials, founded on inherently similar atomistic-modeling approaches but applied towards traditionally distinct disciplines.
Computational Biology
- Molecular Modeling
- Protein Engineering
- Structural Biology
- Bioinformatics/Computational Genomics
- Mathematical Biology
- Computational Drug/Molecular Design
- Gengineering
- Functional/Structural Genomics
- Self-Replicating/Organizing Systems
Computational Chemistry
- Combinatorial Chemistry
- Polymers and Colloids
- Solid State and Surface Chemistry
- Catalysis, Separations and Reactions
- Kinetics and Collision Dynamics
- Crystallization and Additives
- Formulations and QSAR
- Molecular Electronic Structure
- Quantum Molecular Dynamics - Theory & Applications
- General Computational Chemistry - Theory & Methods
Computational Materials
- Interfaces and Contacts
- Surfaces, Surface Processes and Thin Films
- Optical and Vibrational Properties
- Mechanical Behavior
- Alloys and Nanostructures
- Tribology
- Radiation Effects in Solids & Cluster Impact Phenomena
- Semiconductors & Electronic Materials
- Glasses & Ceramics
- Materials at High Pressure and High Temperature
- Large-Scale Simulations
- Multiscale Modeling of Materials
- General Theory & Methods
Technical Program Chairs
Matthew Laudon, NSTI, USA
Bart Romanowicz, NSTI, USA
ICCN - Nanotechnology Chair
Wolfgang Windl, Ohio State University, USA
ICCN - Biotechnology Chairs
Srinivas Iyer, Los Alamos National Laboratory
ICCN & Nanotechnology Conference Committee
Wolfgang S. Bacsa, Université Paul Sabatier, France
Roberto Car, Princeton University, USA
Franco Cerrina, University of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Murray S. Daw, Clemson University, USA
Robert S. Eisenberg, Rush Medical Center, Chicago, USA
Toshio Fukuda, Nagoya University, Japan
David K. Ferry, Arizona State University, USA
Sharon Glotzer, University of Michigan, USA
William Goddard, CalTech, USA
Gerhard Goldbeck-Wood, Accelrys, Inc., UK
Niels Gronbech-Jensen, UC Davis and Berkeley Laboratory
Karl Hess, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Charles H. Hsu, MaxiMEM Limited, Taiwan
Hannes Jonsson, University of Washington, USA
Anantha Krishnan, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, USA
Alex Liddle, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA
Philip Pincus, University of California at Santa Barbara, USA
Serge Prudhomme, University of Texas at Austin, USA
Philippe Renaud, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology of Lausanne
Robert Rudd, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA
Clayton Teague, National Institute of Standards and Technology, USA
Dragica Vasilesca, Arizona State University, USA
Arthur Voter, Los Alamos National Laboratory, USA
Phillip R. Westmoreland , University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA
Gloria Yueh, Midwestern University, USA
Biotechnology Committee
Dirk Bussiere, Chiron Corporation, USA
Amos Bairoch, Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics
Stephen H. Bryant, National Institute of Health, USA
Fred Cohen, University of California, San Francisco, USA
Daniel Davison, Bristol Myers Squibb, USA
Robert S. Eisenberg, Rush Medical Center, Chicago, USA
Andreas Hieke, Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc., USA
Leroy Hood, Institute for Systems Biology, USA
Sorin Istrail, Celera Genomics, USA
Srinivas Iyer, Los Alamos National Laboratory, USA
Brian Korgel, University of Texas-Austin, USA
Kurt Krause, University of Houston, USA
Daniel Lacks, Tulane University, USA
Atul Parikh, University of California, Davis, USA
George Robillard, BioMade Corporation, Netherlands
Tom Terwilliger, Los Alamos National Laboratory, USA
Michael S. Waterman, University of Southern California, USA
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