Under your skin: nanotechnology is the latest weapon in the battle to be beautiful.NANOTECHNOLOGY CONJURES UP IMAGES of Star Trek-like mini-particles zipping through blood and data streams on pre-programmed repair missions. It's the stuff of science journals and hardware designers' wet dreams. Well, keep the wet dreams but switch that science journal to Vogue and Cosmopolitan because nanotechnology--the marriage of engineering and chemistry--can make you beautiful, baby. Those crazy little silicon, zinc and carbon molecular products of biomimetic processes (manmade processes that imitate nature) are buzzing through the boardrooms of cosmetic giants like L'Oreal, Shiseido and Kose, bringing profits with them. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a forecast by a Japanese business organization, Nippon Keidanren, the domestic market for nanotechnology could hit [yen] 2.4 trillion by 2005, with a projected jump to [yen] 27.3 trillion by 2010. That's a lot of microns. Yet most scientific journals, though optimistic about eventual benefits, say we are still years or even decades away from nanotech's true promise. Meanwhile, right here, right now, Shiseido gives an unofficial estimate that the total Japanese cosmetic market in 2001 stood at over [yen] 1.4 trillion. Praise the lord and pass the foundation. International industry giant L'Oreal has surfaced as an early adopter of nanotechnology in cosmetics. "We introduced our first nanotechnology product in 1998," notes Keiko Hirata from Nihon L'Oreal's Lancome marketing department. "Company researchers experimented with 350 formulas and conducted 2,500 tests before arriving at the final product." L'Oreal's Lanc6me Resurface re·sur·face v. re·sur·faced, re·sur·fac·ing, re·sur·fac·es v.tr. To cover with a new surface: resurfacing a road; resurfaced the floor. v.intr. anti-wrinkle cream uses a patented nanocapsule process developed at the company's European lab (no animal testing Animal testing or animal research refers to the use of animals in experiments. It is estimated that 50 to 100 million vertebrate animals worldwide [4][5][6] , by the way) to incorporate vitamin A vitamin A also called retinol Fat-soluble alcohol, most abundant in fatty fish and especially in fish-liver oils. It is not found in plants, but many vegetables and fruits contain beta-carotene (see inside a polymer "capsule." The capsules act like sponges that soak up and hold the product inside until the outer shell dissolves. These compounds are so small--some are just 200 nanometers (a nanometer is one-billionth of a meter)--they don't sit on the surface of the skin but sink down into it right through the pores; they're little beauty mines exploding with benefits from the inside out. Now Lancome products Primordiale Intense and Hydra Zen Serum are also using biomimetic processes. Primordial Intense nanocapsules, for example, are bursting with vitamin A, wheat germ wheat germ n. The vitamin-rich embryo of the wheat kernel that is separated before milling for use as a cereal or food supplement. wheat germ Noun the vitamin-rich middle part of a grain of wheat , sunflower seed extracts and honey. Plans are afoot to bring out a Lancome nanotechnology foundation (for the skin, not an institute) next year. Other cosmetic houses, international and domestic, are pursuing research in nanotechnology applications With nanotechnology, a large set of materials and improved products rely on a change in the physical properties when the feature sizes are shrunk. Nanoparticles for example take advantage of their dramatically increased surface area to volume ratio. Their optical properties, e.g. . Christian Dior Noun 1. Christian Dior - French couturier whose first collection in 1947 created a style that became known as the New Look (1905-1957) Dior has an active molecular biology molecular biology, scientific study of the molecular basis of life processes, including cellular respiration, excretion, and reproduction. The term molecular biology was coined in 1938 by Warren Weaver, then director of the natural sciences program at the Rockefeller division at its extensive Christian Dior Biology Laboratories, and last August Kose Cosmetics released a foundation incorporating titanium oxide and silicon nano-sized (10-nanometer) particles. Yet one of the biggest local micro-successes has been from Japan's cosmetic leader Shiseido. "It took us four or five years of research to develop the process we use in our Elixir elixir /elix·ir/ (e-lik´ser) a clear, sweetened, alcohol-containing, usually hydroalcoholic liquid containing flavoring substances and sometimes active medicinal ingredients. e·lix·ir n. line," says Shiseido spokesman Tatsuyoshi Endo. In research carried out jointly between Shiseido and a partner it prefers not to disclose at this time, the company combined oxide powder with silica powder (talc) at the nano-order level. Research on this composite led to the discovery that an inorganic powder could restrain enzymes leading to dry skin. Unconventional, maybe, but it works. In a three-week trial study on 4,039 women, 70 percent experienced relief from dry, rough skin. Shiseido's first product, Elixir Skinup, debuted in March 2001 and reportedly sold around 1.4 million units in its first year. The same technology has been applied in Pureness Matifying Compact and Benefiance Extra Smoothing Compact. Shiseido plans to follow up this success with skin-care powder, eye shadow and sunscreen sunscreen /sun·screen/ (-skren) a substance applied to the skin to protect it from the effects of the sun's rays. sun·screen n. , all using nanotechnology. What sets these nanotech products apart from all the other shadows, creams and powders crowding department and drugstore shelves? Like Elixir Skinup, these new lines incorporate skincare delivery systems built in at the molecular level. "Most people think of skin-treatment products as lotions or creams --sticky products that lay on the skin," Endo points out. "But using technology at the nano-level, we can actually formulate micro-powder to penetrate and deliver skin benefits directly upon application." New and improved delivery systems are what micro-technology is all about. Beauty and health researchers are excited about the delivery potential of something called Fullerenes, which could make you beautiful inside as well as out. Named for their resemblance to Buckminster Fuller's geodesic domes, these closed carbon molecules are one brave new hope to deliver life-saving medicines directly into diseased tissue. The compounds remain stable--resisting breakdown within the body--until they reach their destination. Right now that may mean a patch of dry skin, but future targets could be viruses like HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. and even cancer cells cells once believed to be peculiar to cancers, but now know to be epithelial cells differing in no respect from those found elsewhere in the body, and distinguished only by peculiarity of location and grouping. See also: Cancer . (The ability to resist breakdown is especially important in delivering radioactive atoms to tumors--premature release can endanger the patient.) Science journals are calling the Fullerene fullerene, any of a class of carbon molecules in which the carbon atoms are arranged into 12 pentagonal faces and 2 or more hexagonal faces to form a hollow sphere, cylinder, or similar figure. capsules "buckyballs." Mitsubishi and Mitsubishi Chemical have formed a new company, Frontier Carbon, which will mass-produce these buckyballs. Nanotechnology is on every industries' to-do list. (Try a "nanotechnology" search on Yahoo and see for yourself). Fabric maker Toray is investing an estimated [yen] 5 billion for construction of a new nanotech lab to be finished by spring 2003; Mitsui has just built a carbon nanotube See nanotube. plant via its wholly owned subsidiary Wholly Owned Subsidiary A subsidiary whose parent company owns 100% of its common stock. Notes: In other words, the parent company owns the company outright and there are no minority owners. , Carbon Nanotech Research Institute in Akishima; the list goes on. Unfortunately, if they're building them now, we're not going to be seeing results for quite a while. Yet as vain as it may seem, research by cosmetics companies is broadening the knowledge base for nanotechnology applications. Today's smooth skin could mean tomorrow's life-saving medical technique. |
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