July 1, 2008 — Veeco Instruments Inc., , a provider of instrumentation to the nanoscience community, has introduced the “Veeco Labs Research Grant Program,” designed to stimulate the generation of new scientific investigation for researchers in the atomic force microscopy community. This grant program will sponsor selected early adopters of current and future Veeco technologies in a variety of ways to enable the realization of their proposed work.
The first of the Veeco Labs grants will solicit proposals utilizing the recently-released HarmoniX Nanoscale Material Property Mapping Mode, which enables AFM users to simultaneously, and in real time, acquire high-resolution images as well as high-resolution, quantitative material property maps. These proposals, due by October 1, 2008, will be judged on creativity, scientific merit and applicability to real-world applications challenges. The five best submissions will be awarded a Veeco HarmoniX Kit, to be used with any Veeco system operating on the latest NanoScope V Controller. This combination will enable the full-treatment HarmoniX Mode to be used to further investigate the proposed science and for other materials research.
“Our desire is to stimulate groundbreaking studies enabled by Veeco’s AFM technology advances in various materials fields,” says David Rossi, vice president, general manager of Veeco’s Nano-Bio AFM business. “Through this grant program, we will continue to help our customers advance the science that is done with SPMs, and make it even easier to deliver new technology to the front lines of emerging applications.”
“Our first experiences with customer use of this system showed a great deal of promise for enabling new research and has generated excitement throughout the AFM user community, as all of the data is the first of its kind, with new information never before accessible in this way,” says Dr. Bede Pittenger, senior development scientist and leader of the HarmoniX effort inside of Veeco. “I think it will be very interesting and gratifying to see the results and impact of the first five grant winners.”
The winners of this competition will also received an expense-paid trip to the Seeing at the NanoScale VII AFM Conference in Santa Barbara, CA, in the summer of 2009.