Top 10 Nanoscience Papers, 2000-09

Data provided by Thomson Reuters from its ISI Web of Science, 2000–present

September 2, 2010

Nanoscience – involving studies at the nanometer scale (a billionth of a metre) – is one of the fastest-growing realms of research today. A search of the Thomson Reuters ISI Web of Science database for articles with the wordstem “nano” in their titles produced about 6,500 items in 2000 and some 44,000 in 2009 – a greater than sixfold increase. If keywords and abstracts were included in the search, about 73,000 papers can be identified for 2009. While the majority appear in journals representing materials science, chemistry and physics, nano­science reports also appear in biological and biomedical titles and, in fact, in almost every field represented in the database.

The table above lists the 10 most cited papers in nanoscience published from 2000 to 2009. Citation totals are current as of August 2010. Naturally, older papers dominate the list, since they have had more years to accumulate citations than younger papers. These, then, may be considered “contemporary classics”. Among the so-called hot papers in Thomson Reuters’ Essential Science Indicators database – papers that are two years old or younger and highly cited – the most cited report is J.?N. Anker et al, “Biosensing with plasmonic nanosensors”, which was published in Nature in June 2008. It has received 250 citations to date.

For more information, see http://science.thomsonreuters.com/products/esi

 Paper author(s), journalCitations
1 %3Cb%3ERoom-temperature ultraviolet nanowire nanolasers%3C/b%3E M. H. Huang, S. Mao, H. Feick et al %3Ci%3EScience%3C/i%3E, 292 (5523): 1897-1899, 8 June 20013,814
2 %3Cb%3EOne-dimensional nanostructures: synthesis, characterization, and applications%3C/b%3E Y. N. Xia, P. D. Yang, Y. G. Sun et al %3Ci%3EAdvanced Materials%3C/i%3E, 15 (5): 353-389, 4 March 2003 3,309
3 %3Cb%3ENanobelts of semiconducting oxides%3C/b%3E Z. W. Pan, Z. R. Dai, Z. L. Wang %3Ci%3EScience%3C/i%3E, 291 (5510): 1947-1949, 9 March 2001 3,058
4 %3Cb%3ECarbon nanotubes: the route toward applications%3C/b%3E R. H. Baughman, A. A. Zakhidov, W. A. de Heer %3Ci%3EScience%3C/i%3E, 297 (5582): 787-792, 2 August 2002 2,993
5 %3Cb%3EGold nanoparticles: assembly, supramolecular chemistry, quantum-size-related properties, and applications toward biology, catalysis, and nanotechnology%3C/b%3E M. C. Daniel, D. Astruc %3Ci%3EChemical Reviews%3C/i%3E, 104 (1): 293-346, January 2004 2,750
6 %3Cb%3EMonodisperse FePt nanoparticles and ferromagnetic FePt nanocrystal superlattices%3C/b%3E S. H. Sun, C. B. Murray, D. Weller et al %3Ci%3EScience%3C/i%3E, 287 (5460): 1989-1992, 17 March 2000 2,607
7 %3Cb%3ENanotube molecular wires as chemical sensors%3C/b%3E J. Kong, N. R. Franklin, C. W. Zhou et al %3Ci%3EScience%3C/i%3E, 287 (5453): 622-625, 28 January 2000 2,477
8 %3Cb%3EPolymer-layered silicate nanocomposites: preparation, properties and uses of a new class of materials%3C/b%3E M. Alexandre, P. Dubois %3Ci%3EMaterials Science & Engineering%3C/i%3E, 28 (1-2): 1-63, 15 June 2000 2,194
9 %3Cb%3ENanowire nanosensors for highly sensitive and selective detection of biological and chemical species%3C/b%3E Y. Cui, Q. Q. Wei, H. K. Park et al %3Ci%3EScience%3C/i%3E, 293 (5533): 1289-1292, 17 August 20011,982
10%3Cb%3EBulk nanostructured materials from severe plastic deformation%3C/b%3E R. Z. Valiev, R. K. Islamgaliev, I. V. Alexandrov Progress in %3Ci%3EMaterials Science%3C/i%3E, 45 (2): 103-189, 2000 1,965

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Register
Please Login or Register to read this article.

Sponsored

ADVERTISEMENT