Research and development in the rapidly expanding discipline of nanoscience examines the behaviour and characteristics of matter and materials at the nanoscale. Nanoscience examines the behaviour and characteristics of matter at the nanoscale by combining knowledge from a number of fields, including physics, chemistry, biology, engineering and materials science. The goal of the interdisciplinary area of nanoscience is to manipulate and take use of the special characteristics of materials, structures and systems at the nanoscale. The nanoscale is a scale of length that ranges from 1 to 100 nanometers, or 1 billionth of a metre.
The behaviour and characteristics of nanoscale materials and structures are also studied by nanoscience. This entails looking into the interactions between materials, their reactions to outside stimuli and the manipulation of their properties at the nanoscale. The features of nanomaterials and nanostructures, such as their optical, electrical and mechanical characteristics, can be studied using nanoscience, for instance.
Speaker Guidelines
Organize your research
- List your research's hypothesis and objectives.
- Describe the research techniques you used.
- Include the information gathered and the findings.
- Draw judgements based on the information gathered.
- Be sure to highlight the research's main points and significance.
Shape your presentation
- Create a summary of your talk in the form of notes.
- Both the slide order and the delivery of your talk should be practiced. Ensure that your talk fits the allowed time.
- Utilize short sentences. Refrain from using jargon, technical terms and obscure acronyms.
- Prepare your responses to any queries that might be posed to you.
- Audio-visual aids should support your speech rather than repeat it.
- Unless it is specifically related to your research, avoid include audio, video, or other copyrighted content in your presentation. If you must use songs, movie clips, or other similar materials, please make sure that they are either free to use online or that you have the right to reproduce them under copyright. The best way to present your work is to use visuals rather than words (graphs, tables, charts, etc.).
- Use line graphs to illustrate trends, bars to compare magnitudes and pie charts to highlight relative proportions of a whole.
- Your accompanying audio-visuals should be brief, uncluttered and legible from a distance. Use a font that is at least eighteen points or bigger, as advised. Because user screen sizes vary, this is particularly crucial when presenting to an online audience.
- If you need specialized AV equipment, request it as soon as possible.