Speaking in an exclusive interview with the Iran Front Page, Sarkar said Iran
fortunately managed to start working on nanotechnology in an appropriate time.
"We began working on the technology almost at the same pace at which such
developed states like the US, Germany, Japan, and South Korea did,” he told the
Iran Front Page in an exclusive interview.
He said he is pleased to see that Iran has paid so much attention to
nanotechnology, stressing that the formation of the Iran Nanotechnology
Initiative Council to oversee the nanotechnology activates in the country was a
correct and prudent decision.
"The INIC is responsible for promotion, education, Research and Development
(R&D), industrialization, and commercialization of nanotechnology in Iran,” he
went on to say.
History of Nanotechnology in Iran
According to Sarkar, the INIC was established in 2003 as part of the
Presidential Office. "When it was established, the Iranian first vice-president
became the head of the country’s Nanotechnology Initiative Council.”
The INIC was officially established in 2003, but we had started our studies back
in 2001, he said.
After the establishment of the INIC, he said, a 10-year strategic document was
developed for the emerging technology.
In that 10-year document, the focus was mostly on the promotion and training of
human resources in the field of nanotechnology, he said.
The document also paid attention to building the required infrastructure for the
development of nanotechnology, its commercialization, and even its marketing,
Sarkar noted.
Our first move was to promote the science at various levels and fields, he said.
The entire society, from those who made the country’s macro-level decisions to
students, ordinary people, and pupils, should have realized how important
nanotechnology was, he noted.
Our next step was to make so much progress in the field of nanotechnology that
no one in the world could ignore Iran when forming a global nanotechnology club,
like the one we have in the field of nuclear energy, he went on to say.
"This was one of our best goals to be a pioneer in this field among all
countries in the world,” Sarkar noted.
Sarkar says plans were later devised to let university students at MSc and PhD
levels to study nanotechnology.
Currently, PhD programs in nanotechnology are available in 23 universities, and
MSc programs in 65 universities, he noted.
There was a time when only ten professors in Iran knew what nanotechnology was,
but now we have over 35,000 nanotechnology specialists in the country with MSc
and PhD degrees, Sarkar added.
"Iran has done a good job in training human resources, and the country has an
outstanding capacity in the world in this regard.”
Iran Holding Fourth Rank after China, US, India
"The Islamic Republic made great strides in achieving scientific development
once the human resources received the required training and started their
research,” he noted.
"The quantity and quality of our ISI articles is an important yardstick against
which to measure a country’s scientific growth. This is what the world pays
attention to.
Research articles are considered as a criterion to measure how powerful a
country is in the field of science.”
"Great scientific power helps a country make new inventions and discoveries.
This is why we were resolved to achieve such scientific power. We wanted to
avoid imitating others. We wanted to be productive,” he added.
"Last year, we produced 8,400 articles in this field, and gained the fourth rank
worldwide. Our position was 57 in 2001, and we managed to increase it to the 4th
rank in 2017.”
"We used to publish 10 articles a year, but now the number has increased to 22
articles a day, which shows an explosion and a scientific record,” he noted.
"In 2018, China, the US, India, and Iran were the top four countries in
nanotechnology.
The first three are very populous countries; so Iran has done a perfect job
considering its human resources and population and limitations in financial
resources,” he added.
"We did not restrict the scientific growth and development to our universities;
rather, we have targeted our pupils as well. We have already provided 750,000
school boys and girls with nanotechnology education,” Sarkar said.
"We have established over 80 nanotechnology labs across the country. All the
equipment of these labs has been designed and produced inside the country, and
this is very significant and inspiring for a student who goes to the lab and
finds out the equipment and machines are not made by other countries.”
He says the country’s progress in this field has been so considerable that the
Chinese have asked Iran to launch 10 labs for them with the same equipment. "We
have already launched two of the labs for them.”
"In the first 10-year document, we had set a goal to be among the top 10
countries of the world in the field of nanotechnology by 2015, but we managed to
rank sixth by the end of the 10-year period,” he noted.
Source:IFP