"But I am not afraid to consider the final question as to
whether, ultimately---in the great future---we can arrange the
atoms the way we want; the very atoms, all the way down!" -Richard
Feynman, There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom
The first time the idea of nanotechnology was
introduced was in 1959, when Richard Feynman (Figure 1), a physicist at Caltech,
gave a talk entitled There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom. Though he
never explicitly mentioned "nanotechnology," Feynman suggested that it
will eventually be possible to precisely manipulate atoms and
molecules. Moreover, in an even more radical proposition, he thought
that, in principle, it was possible to create "nano-scale" machines,
through a cascade of billions of factories. According to the
physicist, these factories would be progressively smaller scaled
versions of machine hands and tools. He proposed that these tiny
"machine shops" would then eventually be able to create billions of
tinier factories. In these speculations, he also suggested that
there are various factors, which uniquely affect the nano-scale
level. Specifically, he suggested that as the scale got smaller and
smaller, gravity would become more negligible, while both van der
Waals attraction and surface tension would become very important. In
the end, Feynman's talk has been viewed as the first academic talk
that dealt with a main tenet of nanotechnology, the direct
manipulation of individual atoms (molecular manufacturing).
Hence, long before STMs and atomic force
microscopes were invented Feynman proposed these revolutionary ideas
to his peers. As demonstrated in his quote (above), he chose to deal
with a "final question" that wasn't fully realized till the eighties
and nineties. Ultimately then, it was during these two decades, when
the term "nanotechnology" was coined and researchers, starting with
Eric Drexler, built up this field from the foundation that Feynman
constructed in 1959. However, some such as Chris Toumey minimize the
importance of Feynman in the establishment of the intellectual
groundwork for nanotechnology. Instead, using evidence from its
citation history, Toumey sees There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom
as a "founding myth" that served only to directly influence Drexler
rather than the other important scientists, who affected the future
development of nanotechnology. Nevertheless, though the ultimate
effect of Feynman's talk is debatable, it is certain that this work
directly influenced Drexler's own research, which thus indirectly
influenced nanotechnology as a whole.