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- | First test of making | + | ====== Welcome ====== |
- | Change | + | Welcome to the wiki for the [[https:// |
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+ | ===== Image Gallery ===== | ||
+ | You are welcome to use our images for a class or presentation, | ||
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+ | |{{glowing_tube_500pix.jpg|}}|Carbon nanotube connected to a metal electrode at //V// = -3V. Color contrast is a map of the electrostatic forces between the sample and the grounded AFM tip. The gap between the electrodes is 3 μm| | ||
+ | |{{beaverslogo_500pix.jpg}}|Oregon State Beavers' | ||
+ | |{{osu-protein_500.jpg|}}|3 micron scan of proteins coating a silicon oxide substrate. The proteins have been pushed around by the AFM tip to form the OSU logo. The proteins pile up during the writing process, like snow on the side of a ploughed road. The surface roughness corresponds to individual proteins, the individual protein molecules are 4 nanometers tall| | ||
+ | |{{postercnt3_500pix.jpg|}}|Carbon nanotube grown on silicon oxide, 400 x 800 nm AFM scan| | ||
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+ | |{{protein_on_tubes500pix.jpg|}}|1 micron scan of IgG proteins on top of nanotubes. We are currently investigating how protein binding effects the conductance of nanotubes. This biosensor technology is a promising route to improving medical diagnostics.| | ||
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+ | |{{jb_500pix.jpg|}}|Write you initial where nobody can see! The substrate is a CD. The plastic coating is perfect for doodling with an AFM tip.| | ||
+ | |{{graphene_500.jpg|}}|5 micron scan showing a flake of single layer graphene (0.5 nm tall). Graphene is a sheet of covalently bonded carbon atoms which is one atom thick. Graphene has unique electrical properties such as zero effective electron mass. Sample courtesy of Lan Liu, TU Delft.| | ||
+ | |{{electrical_chip_500.jpg|}}|Optical microscope (~ 2 mm field of view) showing the electrodes for 50 different nanotube devices. The layout is designed to fit a 1 mm o-ring around all active transistors.| | ||
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+ | |{{nanotubes_on_glass_500pix.jpg|}}|Sample courtesy of Leo Fifield, Pacific Northwest National Labs. Nanotubes were first dissolved in solvent, then caught in a filter and then pressed on this glass substrate. In the grey square the nanotubes form a mat many tubes deep. We collaborate with Dr. Yun-Shik Lee (OSU Physics) to study the optical and THz properties such samples. | | ||
+ | |{{membrane_ethan.jpg}}|4.5 micron AFM image of mycobacterial membranes taken in liquid. The membrane has separated into two phases, the step height between the two phases is approximately 1 nanometer. The image has been colored using the relative energy dissipation of the AFM tip tapping on the softer phase vs. the firmer phase. The sample was prepared by Raghu Parthasarathy' | ||
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start.1568085414.txt.gz · Last modified: 2019/09/09 20:16 by ethanminot