1 / 16

Activities during UK-Japan Young Scientist Workshop

Activities during UK-Japan Young Scientist Workshop. Dr Riz Khan Room 31DJ02, x6062, e-mail: r.khan@surrey.ac.uk Advanced Technology Institute University of Surrey. Learning Outcomes. What do we want you to learn? Which techniques will you be using? What will you take away?.

Download Presentation

Activities during UK-Japan Young Scientist Workshop

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Activities during UK-Japan Young Scientist Workshop Dr Riz Khan Room 31DJ02, x6062, e-mail: r.khan@surrey.ac.uk Advanced Technology Institute University of Surrey

  2. Learning Outcomes • What do we want you to learn? • Which techniques will you be using? • What will you take away?

  3. Literature searching • We have set up a number of computers in the CAD room for you to use • We want you to search for information on the internet related to nanotechnology • Also search for the experiments that you will be doing • Research is the key to scientific success!

  4. Computer aided design • We will ask you to design structures to be written on a nano-scale • This will be done in the CAD laboratory (04DJ01) • The images should be of different sizes so that you can see what the resolution of the equipment is • How would you do this?? • Good examples are e.g. your names in English and Japanese, scanned-in pictures etc

  5. Focussed Ion Beams • Focussed ion beams (FIBs) are used to write structures on the nanoscale • Creates a beam of ions (5-30 keV) that bombard and erode the sample • Milling commonly done in high vacuum • Resolutions approaching 10 nm • What is the resolution of ours?

  6. Focussed ion beams • Our machine! • (and out PhD students and scientific staff) • 10 superconducting junctions, University of Cambridge Materials dept

  7. Imaging / microscopy techniques

  8. Light versus electrons…

  9. Scanning electron microscopy • Use a beam of highly energetic electrons to examine objects on a very fine scale: • Topography • Morphology • Composition (if appropriate detector equipped) • Samples normally conductive or coated with thin conductive layer Electron beam (0.1-50 keV) Secondary electrons (low E) Backscattered electrons (high E) Light (cathodoluminescence) X-rays } 1 micron 10 nm {

  10. Scanning electron microscopy • Electron beam source - filament (W or LaB6) or field emission • Focused to 1-5 nm spot size, scanned over sample • Incident electrons either: • Scatter back • Knock other electrons out (secondary electrons) • Secondary electrons - greater in number Backscattered electrons - Z sensitive Secondary electrons - Z-insensitive compositional information • Analysis of x-ray emission (energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy, EDX) gives elemental analysis

  11. Scanning electron microscopy • Typical image… Already well used in microelectronics, biology, materials science, etc

  12. Atomic Force Microscopy • Tip mounted on flexible cantilever • Atomic (Van der Waals) forces result in deflection of tip • Measured using deflection of a laser beam incident on the cantilever detector laser cantilever tip

  13. Atomic Force Microscopy • Contact mode • constant force between tip and surface (constant deflection) • Non-contact mode • Cantilever is oscillated • Oscillation frequency changed by atomic force • Compared to reference frequency • More sensitive Contact mode is simpler to perform • but has poorer resolution / contrast and can damage the film surface

  14. Timetable • Monday 2-4:30 • Talks - JA, RK • Tour of facilities - Steve Lyth, Yoji • Introduction of CAD and internet facilities • Tuesday 10-12 • design structures to be FIB'd. • Place - CAD room (Yoji) • Tuesday 2-4:30 • Nanostructures written by FIB (David Cox) - three groups! • Place - FIB / microscopy room • Waiting students perform internet research in CAD room

  15. Timetable • Thursday 10-4:30 • AFM and SEM on the structures. (Yann Tison, Steve Lyth) - same groups as before • Place - FIB / microscopy room • We have a number of other secret structures to look at! • Other students perform internet research in CAD room • Friday morning • Preparation for presentation • Place - CAD room • Assistance - Yoji • Friday afternoon - presentations!

  16. Any questions?

More Related