Table of Contents

Lab Notebook

It is fun and informative to look at the lab notebooks of other scientists. For example, Don Eigler's lab notebook where he recorded the discovery that he could move atoms around with an STM tip.

There are two primary motivations behind the keeping of a good lab notebook. One is legal. When a discovery is challenged, the lawyers need the notebooks. The notebook must follow a certain protocol in order to defeat accusations of falsification.

The second motivation is more important to most academics. You have to remember what you did, why you did it, and what happened. You need to recall these things 3 or 4 years after doing the experiment. You need details. At the end of a PhD program you will be writing a paper that could very well be connected to the entirety of your experience in the program, so you should be able to look back and reference everything you’ve done.

To make a “watertight” notebook that lawyers will like:

Clean room notebook

You must also make notes about how you fabricate devices. If you are working in the cleanroom, the detailed fabrication notes will typically be made in your cleanroom notebook. If all your fabrication work is done outside the cleanroom, it is OK to keep your fabrication note in your lab notebook.

Complementing your lab note book with computer files

Choose a organization protocol for your “raw data” computer files. Stick to this organization protocol. You should be able to find an entry in your lab notebook and easily locate the accompanying AFM file or I-V curve. Here is a default protocol, you can improve upon it if you wish:

We also make powerpoint files (collections of graphs, images and captions), excel spread sheets (keeping track of all the devices on a chip, which are working, when they were measured etc.), numerical modeling code, and data analysis files. These computer files are very useful, but are secondary ways to organize your work. The raw information should always be in the lab notebook.