Tags: tutorial

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  1. Multiphase Gallium Nitride Nanowires and Nanocircuits

    04 Feb 2008 | | Contributor(s):: Virginia M. Ayres

    Catalyst-free vapor-solid nanowire growth, a newly described method for the production of nanowires compatible with a wide variety of semiconductor materials, has been used to produce novel multiphase zinc-blende/wurtzite gallium nitride nanowires. Orientation relation-ships within the multiphase...

  2. Developing Tools for nanoHUB.org

    23 Jan 2008 | | Contributor(s):: Michael McLennan

    The nanoHUB lets you access simulation tools online via an ordinary web browser. Where do the tools come from? From you--hundreds of you throughout the world who are developing nanotechnology modeling tools. Anyone can upload their own code onto nanoHUB and publish a tool for a limited group of...

  3. Nanometrology Room Design: The Performance and Characterization of the Kevin G. Hall Nanometrology Laboratory

    22 Jan 2008 | | Contributor(s):: Ron Reifenberger

    This seminar summarizes the capabilities of the high accuracy Kevin G. Hall Laboratory which is located in Purdue’s newly completed Birck Nanotechnology Center. The seminar is primarily intended for anyone interested in designing, building and characterizing a high accuracy room for nanoscience...

  4. Lectures on Molecular Dynamics Modeling of Materials

    09 Jan 2008 | | Contributor(s):: Alejandro Strachan

    Molecular dynamics simulations are playing an increasingly important role in many areas of science and engineering, from biology and pharmacy to nanoelectronics and structural materials. Recent breakthroughs in methodologies and in first principles-based interatomic potentials significantly...

  5. NanoElectronic MOdeling: NEMO

    20 Dec 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Gerhard Klimeck

    This presentation was one of 13 presentations in the one-day forum, "Excellence in Computer Simulation," which brought together a broad set of experts to reflect on the future of computational science and engineering.Novel nanoelectronic devices such as quantum dots, nanowires, and ultra-scaled...

  6. HPCW Introduction to Parallel Programming with MPI

    05 Dec 2007 | | Contributor(s):: David Seaman

    Single-session courseillustrating message-passing techniques. The examples include point-to-pointand collective communication using blocking and nonblocking transmission. Oneapplication illustrates the manager/worker model with buffered communications.Code examples provided in C, C++, Fortran 77,...

  7. Electrons in Two Dimensions: Quantum Corrals and Semiconductor Microstructures

    04 Dec 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Eric J. Heller

    The images generated by a scanning tunneling microscope are iconic. Some of the most famous are Don Eigler’s quantum corrals, which reveal not only the guest atoms on a surface but especially the interference patterns of electrons shuttling back and forth along the surface. To understand the...

  8. Plastic Deformation at Micron and Submicron Scales

    28 Nov 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Marisol Koslowski

    Most people experiences the way objects plastically deform on a macroscopic scale. From a car crash to the bending of a paper clip plastic deformation occurs in the form of a smooth flow as a response of an applied stress. But due to the constant shrinking on the dimensions of mechanical devices...

  9. NCN Nanoelectronics: Tutorials

    28 Nov 2007 |

    From among the many tutorial lectures available on the nanoHUB, we list a few that convey new approaches to electronics.

  10. Engineering Nanomedical Systems

    16 Nov 2007 | | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    This tutorial will cover general problems and approaches to the design of engineered nanomedical systems. An example to be covered is the engineering design of programmable multilayered nanoparticles (PMNP) to control a multi-sequence process of targeting to rare cells in-vivo, re-targeting to...

  11. Engineering at the nanometer scale: Is it a new material or a new device?

    06 Nov 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Gerhard Klimeck

    This seminar will overview NEMO 3D simulation capabilities and its deployment on the nanoHUB as well as an overview of the nanoHUB impact on the community.

  12. HPCW Condor: High Throughput Computing

    09 Oct 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Thomas (Tom) Kesler

    Condor is a research project of the University of Wisconsin. It offers an environment called "High Throughput Computing" for compute-intensive jobs. Condor can manage a collection of compute nodes and can harness wasted CPU power from otherwise idle workstations of a cluster or desktop. Condor...

  13. High Performance Computing Training Workshop

    09 Oct 2007 |

    The Computing Research Institute and the Rosen Center for Advanced Computing hosted a training workshop on High Performance Computing August 6 &7, and September 10 & 11, 2007. The goal of this workshop is to increase the attendees’ knowledge of parallel architectures and parallel programming on...

  14. HPCW High-end HPC Architectures

    09 Oct 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Mithuna Thottethodi

  15. HPCW Parallel Programming Models

    09 Oct 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Sam Midkiff

  16. Simulating with PETE: Purdue Exploratory Technology Evaluator

    25 Sep 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Arijit Raychowdhury

    Using PETE one can evaluate any MOSFET like devices or any New Devices in terms of performance on Benchmark circuits. The input to the tool can be in terms of typical MOSFET parameters or in terms of I-V and C-V tables. The Benchmark circuits include minimum sized inverter, nand chain, norchain,...

  17. Scientific Ethics and the Signs of Voodoo Science

    24 Sep 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Andrew S. Hirsch

    Until recently, the issue of research ethics had not been a subject of explicit discussion within the Physics community. Over the past ten years, however, documented cases of scientific fraud have brought this issue to center stage. Looking at case studies, this talk explores examples ranging...

  18. Using Workspaces on nanoHUB.org

    24 Aug 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Michael McLennan

    One of the most powerful tools on nanoHUB is something we call a workspace, which is a full-featured Linux desktop that you can access any time, any place, from your web browser. Workspaces are fully loaded with the latest nanoHUB software stack, including the Rappture toolkit, Octave, Scilab, a...

  19. The Nano-MOSFET: A brief introduction

    17 Aug 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

    MOSFET channel lengths are now well below 100nm, and getting smaller, but MOSFETs are still modeled and understood much as they were 30 years ago. Seminal work in the 1960’s laid the foundation for our understanding of the MOSFET, but traditional approaches are based on concepts that lose...

  20. Using Subversion for Source Code Control

    14 Aug 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Michael McLennan

    If you're developing software, you should be storing your code in a source code control system. The nanoHUB team recommends Subversion, because it is easy to use, open source, and available on Unix/Linux, Windows, MacOSX, and many other systems. Subversion is similar to the popular CVS system...