Home

Nanovolume

Nanovolume is a nanoscale unit of volume defined as the volume of a cube with side length of one nanometer. In numeric terms, it equals 1 cubic nanometer (nm^3), which is 1×10^-27 cubic meters or about 1×10^-24 liters. It is not an official SI unit, but it is used informally in nanotechnology, materials science, and nanofluidics to convey the extreme confinement and the minute scale of nanoscale structures.

Nanovolume is typically employed to describe the size of tiny spaces, such as nanopores, nanofabricated channels,

As a rough scale reference, the number of molecules that fit into a nanovolume depends on the

See also: nanometer, cubic nanometer, nanofluidics, nanopore, nanoscale.

and
confined
fluid
volumes
within
nanoscale
devices.
It
provides
a
convenient
reference
when
discussing
geometry
and
volume
at
the
nanometer
scale,
where
conventional
units
like
liters
or
cubic
meters
become
unwieldy
for
expressing
very
small
quantities.
material.
For
liquid
water
at
room
temperature
and
standard
density
(~1
g/cm^3),
the
volume
of
1
nm^3
contains
on
the
order
of
30
to
35
water
molecules.
In
solids
or
denser
media,
the
actual
constituent
count
per
nm^3
will
differ
according
to
molecular
packing
and
density.
Thus
nanovolume
serves
as
a
qualitative
gauge
of
size,
not
a
fixed,
substance-specific
quantity.