Scanning probe microscopy in modern nanotechnology
Scanning Probe microscopy (SPM) is one of the major tools responsible for the emergence of what is called “Nanoscience and Nanotechnology”. Various high-resolution SPM techniques proved to be capable of probing local electrical, magnetic, chemical, mechanical, optical and thermal properties of matter at the nanoscale level as well as changing these properties in a controlled manner. We observe now a tremendous proliferation of the areas of SPM applications in condensed matter, materials science, chemistry, bioengineering and nanotechnology. Your contributions are invited in all areas of SPM techniques related to study materials and processes at nanoscale, in particular:
- Novel development of SMP techniques
- SPM in biological and biomolecular applications
- SPM in application to nanotechnology
Session organizer
Prof. Igor Sokolov is professor of chemistry at Clarkson University, and director of the NanoBioLaboratory at Clarkson.
Session sponsor
This session is sponsored by Veeco, Inc., manufacturer of atomic force microscopes and other instruments for nanotechnology. Veeco provides the tools to make, measure and visualize today's world-changing technologies. From LED, solar, data storage, semiconductor and wireless to the frontiers of life science, materials science and nanotechnology, Veeco drives the tiny changes that change everything.Confirmed speakers
- Prof. Todd Gross, Chair, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of New Hampshire.
- Prof. Zoya Leonenko, Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology, University of Waterloo, Ontario.
- Prof. Andrew Pelling, Department of Physics, University of Ottawa.
- Prof. Terri Camesano,Dept. of Chemical Engineering, Worcester Polytechnic Institute.
- Dr. John Thornton (Veeco, Inc.)
- Prof. Chuan-Jian Zhong, Dept. of Chemistry, SUNY Binghamton.
- Dr.. Alexander Tselev, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN: "AFM-based Scannign Mirowave Microscopy and its application to studies of metal-insulator transition in VO2".
- Prof. Nancy A. Burnham, Dept. of Physics, Worcester Polytechnic Institute.
- Prof. Dawn A. Bonnell, Dept. of Materials Science & Engineering, University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Bonnell's presentation will be given by Dr. Matthew Brukman, a research associate in the Bonnell group.