Tags: experiments

All Categories (61-80 of 108)

  1. SPMW The Nanomechanics of compositional mapping in amplitude modulation AFM

    05 Jan 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Ricardo Garcia

    Amplitude modulation atomic force microscopy (AM-AFM) has been very successful for imaging with high spatial resolution inorganic as well as soft materials such as polymers, living cells and single biomolecules in their natural environment [1]. The ability of AM-AFM to separate topography from...

  2. BNC Annual Research Symposium: Metrology and Nanomaterials Characterization

    10 May 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Ron Reifenberger

    This presentation is part of a collection of presentations describing the projects, people, and capabilities enhanced by research performed in the Birck Center, and a look at plans for the upcoming year.

  3. SPMW FIRAT: A fast and sensitive probe structure for SPM

    05 Jan 2007 | | Contributor(s):: F. Levent Degertekin

    A new SPM probe, called the force sensing integrated readout and active tip (FIRAT), is described and initial experimental results obtained on commercial AFM systems are presented. FIRAT combines a micromachined integrated electrostatic actuator to move the tip and an integrated optical...

  4. Introduction to Scanning Tunneling Microscopy

    20 Apr 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Hyung-Seok Hahm

    This is a 60 second movie clip with an introduction to Scanning Tunneling Microscopy(STM). Design goals are - Give an idea of what STM looks like- Provide an overview of what STM does and how it worksProduced by Imran Sobh and Hyung-Seok HahmAs part of instructional materials by...

  5. Operation of Scannig Tunneling Microscopy

    20 Apr 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Hyung-Seok Hahm

    This is a 60-second movie clip with a narration of how Scanning Tunneling Microscopy(STM) operates. Produced by Eric Meyer, Imran Sobh and Hyung-Seok Hahm Beckman InstituteUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign As part of instructional materials by National Center for Learning and Teaching in...

  6. BNC Annual Research Symposium: Welcome and Overview

    23 Apr 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Timothy D. Sands

    This presentation is part of a collection of presentations describing the projects, people, and capabilities enhanced by research performed in the Birck Center, and a look at plans for the upcoming year.

  7. BNC Annual Research Symposium: Nanoscale Energy Conversion

    23 Apr 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Timothy S Fisher

    This presentation is part of a collection of presentations describing the projects, people, and capabilities enhanced by research performed in the Birck Center, and a look at plans for the upcoming year.

  8. Planning for Disaster: Designing a Cleanroom to Minimize Risk Should a Disaster Occur

    09 Apr 2007 | | Contributor(s):: John Weaver

    The cleanliness levels of a cleanroom or other high-technology facility make it inherently vulnerable to a disaster such as a fire. Historically, even a small event of this type can cause significant downtime and cost millions of dollars in remediation. When designing a cleanroom, steps can be...

  9. Toward Improving the Precision of Nanoscale Force-Displacement Measurements

    13 Mar 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Jason Clark

    Nanotechnology has great potential for being used to create better medicines, materials, and sensors. With increasing interest in nanotechnology to improve the quality of our lives, there has been an increasing use of nanoscience tools to measure force and displacement to understand nanoscale...

  10. What Can the TEM Tell You About Your Nanomaterial?

    26 Feb 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Eric Stach

    In this tutorial, I will present a brief overview of the ways that transmission electron microscopy can be used to characterize nanoscale materials. This tutorial will emphasize what TEM does well, as well where difficulties arise. In particular, I will discuss in an overview manner how...

  11. Frontiers in Scanning Probe Microscopy

    30 Nov 2006 |

    From October 4- 6, 2006 the Birck Nanotechnology Center at Purdue University hosted a three day focused workshop on cutting edge SPM techniques that are under development throughout the world.The three day workshop featured thematically arranged invited talks. The workshop themes are...

  12. SPMW Interplay between theory and experiment in AFM nanomechanical studies of polymers

    30 Nov 2006 | | Contributor(s):: Sergei Magonov, Sergey Belikov

    High-resolution imaging of surfaces and compositional mapping of heterogeneous materials are the main functions of atomic force microscopy (AFM) in studies of polymer materials. Compositional mapping is mostly based on differences of mechanical properties of the sample components yet quantitative...

  13. SPMW Nanotube, nanoneedle and nanomeniscus: mechanical and wetting properties of modified AFM tip apex

    12 Dec 2006 | | Contributor(s):: J. P. Aimé

    Among AFM microscopes, Dynamic force microscopes (DFM) are very sensitive to variation of minute forces involved in the interaction between the tip and the surface. However, despite numerous efforts, imaging and probing mechanical properties of soft materials in air and water at the nm scale are...

  14. SPMW Nanomechanics: from nanotechnology to biology

    12 Dec 2006 | | Contributor(s):: Elisa Riedo

    The development of new materials with size of few nanometers has opened a new field of scientific and technological research. The goal is to develop faster and better communication systems and transports, as well as smarter and smaller nanodevices for biomedical applications. To reach these...

  15. SPMW Nonlinear dynamics in AFM - chaos and parametric resonance

    05 Jan 2007 | | Contributor(s):: Arvind Raman

    The field of nonlinear dynamics deals with mathematical techniques to study the nonlinear equations that serve as models of physical systems. The benefits of using nonlinear dynamics concepts to interpret and predict probe oscillations in dynamic AFM [1] are becoming increasingly clear. Nonlinear...

  16. SPMW Mechanisms of atomic friction studied by friction force microscopy

    12 Dec 2006 | | Contributor(s):: Ernst Meyer

    Force microscopy is a versatile instrument to investigate physical phenomena on surfaces. The first emphasis is on the study of friction on the nanometer-scale, also called nanotribology. It will be shown that atomic-scale stick-slip is relatively well understood, where the dependence on velocity...

  17. X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS)

    14 Dec 2006 | | Contributor(s):: David Echevarria Torres

    The XPS (X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy) it is also known as ESCA (Electron Spectroscopy for Chemical Analysis). This technique is based on the theory of the photoelectric effect that was developed by Einstein, yet it was Dr. Siegbahn and his research group who developed the XPS technique. ...

  18. Spectroscopic Ellipsometry

    12 Dec 2006 | | Contributor(s):: Lynn Marie Santiago

    This is the fourth contribution from the students in the University of Texas at El Paso Molecular Electronics course given in the fall of 2006.This presentation is presented at the undergraduate level and introduces spectroscopic ellipsometry, which is one of the most important characterization...

  19. Materials Science on the Atomic Scale with the 3-D Atom Probe

    08 Nov 2006 | | Contributor(s):: George D. W. Smith

    Some of the key goals of materials science and technology are to be able to design a material from first principles, to predict its behaviour, and also to optimise the processing route for its manufacture. In recent years, these goals have come closer to realisation, thanks in part to the...

  20. Joshua Borneman

    Joshua Borneman is currently a research assistant and Ph.D candidate in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Birck Nanotechnology Center at Purdue University. He works with...

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