Tag Archives: Small Times Magazine

(August 9, 2010) — Technologies used to project images have been relentlessly miniaturized over the past decade.  As a result many companies are now actively looking into embedding these pico projectors into an ever-expanding range of consumer products, from cellphones to mobile TV, according to In-Stat. "Pico Projectors: One Reason Bigger Isn’t Better," provides worldwide market share and shipment forecasts of pico projector module adoption into a variety of mobile and hand held devices.

Forecast shipment growth of CE devices with embedded pico projector modules will increase to over 20 million devices by 2014, with mobile handsets share of that market moving from its current level of 15% to over 90% by 2014. 

MEMS components are an enabling technology of pico projectors.

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iSuppli stated that a bright spot in 2009 for MEMS devices was the pico projector (Read the analysis here.)
 
“Although the integration of ‘pico‘ projectors will occur across the entire CE device spectrum, the biggest push will come from the mobile handset segment,” says Frank Dickson, VP Mobile Internet Research.  “The reality is that the mobile handset market is measured in billions, creating massive opportunities for component manufactures.  For pico projectors, what makes it even more attractive is that the market is hypercompetitive, with manufacturers always aggressively looking to add new features to create differentiation.  Pico projectors is definititely a significant differentiating feature.”

While stand-alone/accessory pico projectors (which plug into a device, such as a cell phone, iPod or laptop) dominate the market, there is clear movement from “plug-in” to “embedded.”  Standalone/accessory projectors market share will decline from roughly 37% in 2010 to less than 4% over the five year forecast period.

While the number of personal consumer electronics leveraging pico projection will most certainly increase over the next five years, its overall share will reduce due to the size of the mobile handset market.
The number of companies developing pico projectors for integration and/or as standalone products continues to expand, with 18 vendors now claiming to have the best technological solution including; 3M, ADM (aka Explay), bTendo, Digislide, Display Photonics Systems, Himax, Lite Blue Optics, Lite-On Technology, Maradin Technologies, Mezmeriz, Micron Displaytech, Microvision, Mirrorcle Technologies, Mitsumi Electric, Nippon Signal, Opus Microsystems, Syndiant, and Texas Instruments.

The recent In-Stat research, "Pico Projectors: One Reason Bigger Isn’t Better", #IN1004722WH, provides worldwide market share and shipment forecasts of pico projector module adoption into a variety of mobile and hand held devices including:

  • Handsets
  • Notebooks
  • Personal CE Products (Digital Cameras, Digital Camcorders, Digital Clocks)
  • Gaming
  • Mobile TV
  • Portable Media Players
  • Standalone/Accesory Pico Projectors

For a free sample of the reports and more information, contact Elaine Potter at [email protected] or (480) 483-4441. To purchase it online, visit: http://www.instat.com/abstract.asp?id=66&SKU=IN1004722WH

This research is part of In-Stat’s Mobile & Computing Devices service, which provides analysis and forecasts of the market for mobile communications and computing devices, including cell phones, smartphones, MIDs, tablets, mini-notes/netbooks, and notebooks. In-Stat’s market intelligence combines technical, market and end-user research and database models to analyze the Mobile Internet and Digital Entertainment ecosystems.

Read more about electronics design, engineering, and manufacturing at www.electroIQ.com

(August 5, 2010) — Most materials melt — change from a solid to a liquid state — as they get warmer. A few materials do the reverse: they melt as they get cooler. A team of researchers at MIT has found that silicon for semiconductors and solar cells can exhibit this strange property of “retrograde melting” when it contains high concentrations of certain metals dissolved in it. The findings could be useful in lowering the cost of manufacturing some silicon-based devices, especially those in which tiny amounts of impurities can significantly reduce performance.

Figure. A tiny silicon chip — the glowing orange square at the center of this special heating device — is heated to a temperature well below silicon’s melting point, and then very slowly cooled down. The chip inside this heating device was placed in the path of a synchrotron beam to probe its changes at a molecular level as it went through the retrograde melting process.

The material, a compound of silicon, copper, nickel and iron, “melts” (actually turning from a solid to a slush-like mix of solid and liquid material) as it cools below 900°C, whereas silicon ordinarily melts at 1414°C. The much lower temperatures make it possible to observe the behavior of the material during melting, based on specialized X-ray fluorescence (XRF) microprobe technology using a synchrotron (a type of particle accelerator) as a source.

The material and its properties are described in a paper published online in the journal Advanced Materials. Team leader Tonio Buonassisi, the SMA Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Manufacturing, is the senior author, and the lead authors are Steve Hudelson MS ’09, and postdoctoral fellow Bonna Newman PhD ’08.

In the material that Buonassisi and his researchers studied, impurities tend to migrate to the liquid portion, leaving regions of purer silicon behind. This could make it possible to produce some silicon-based devices, such as solar cells, using a less pure, and therefore less expensive, grade of silicon that would be purified during the manufacturing process.

“If you can create little liquid droplets inside a block of silicon, they serve like little vacuum cleaners to suck up impurities,” Buonassisi says. This research could also lead to new methods for making arrays of silicon nanowires — tiny tubes that are highly conductive to heat and electricity.

Buonassisi predicted in a 2007 paper that it should be possible to induce retrograde melting in silicon, but the conditions needed to produce such a state, and to study it at a microscopic level, are highly specialized and have only recently become available. To create the right conditions, Buonassisi and his team had to adapt a microscope “hot-stage” device that allowed the researchers to precisely control the rate of heating and cooling. And to actually observe what was happening as the material was heated and cooled, they drew upon high-power synchrotron-based X-ray sources at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California and at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois (researchers from both national labs are co-authors of the paper).

The research was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, the Clare Booth Luce Foundation, Doug Spreng and the Chesonis Family Foundation, and some equipment was provided by McCrone Scientific.

The material for the tests consisted of a kind of sandwich made from two thin layers of silicon, with a filling of copper, nickel and iron between them. This was first heated enough to cause the metals to dissolve into the silicon, but below silicon’s melting point. The amount of metal was such that the silicon became supersaturated: more of the metal was dissolved in the silicon than would normally be possible under stable conditions. For example, when a liquid is heated, it can dissolve more of another material, but then when cooled down it can become supersaturated, until the excess material precipitates out.

In this case, where the metals were dissolved into the solid silicon, “if you begin cooling it down, you hit a point where you induce precipitation, and it has no choice but to precipitate out in a liquid phase,” Buonassisi says. It is at that point that the material melts.

Matthias Heuer, a senior research scientist at Calisolar, a solar-energy startup company, says this work is “unique and new to our field,” and it “allows some very good insight into how transition metals and structural defects interact.” But he adds that there are a number of questions still to be answered in follow-up research: “Now that we know liquid inclusions can form, the question is, how efficient as sinks for impurities are they? How stable are they? Can they keep the impurities localized during other process steps — for example, during the final firing process of a solar cell?”

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(August 4, 2010) — Jeremy Lug, Dynamics Research Corporation Metrigraphics Division, goes over what you need to know to design bio-compatible medical electronics on time, on budget, and with FDA approval to sell. A lot of medical device engineering is tradeoffs between materials, processes, labor, and other factors.

Engineers in all industries strive to push the technology edge forward into uncharted territories. In the flexible circuit industry, the majority of circuits have existed comfortably for many years within the line and space size range of 4mils (~100µm) and higher without the need to undergo a serious size reduction.

While large segments of the market continue to operate there, electronic equipment and technology advances have created the need for flexible circuits with expanded requirements and line and space sizes in the micron range. 

 
Figure 1. Square traces are circuits with lines and spaces in the 5-10µm range that enable small, flexible circuits to be used in a variety of implantable applications.

Transitioning from one size range to the next still represents a tremendous challenge for materials, processes, and manufacturability. The introduction of aspect ratio optimization and material/process incompatibilities could present new problems not encountered to-date by designers. However, these challenges can be addressed at the same time or serially depending on the resources available, and the window of opportunity. One way to address the incompatibility challenge is introducing square traces into the manufacturing process. Square traces are circuits with lines and spaces that can be used in a variety of implantable applications. They facilitate the transition process from size ranges (Fig. 1).

Biocompatibility

Biocompatibility means that the device, with its intended micro components, either resides in vitro (entirely within the body) or in close contact with the body (on the surface of the skins or subcutaneously). In some cases, it means to be used for a brief period of time within the body, but not left there.

From a medical device standpoint, specific devices — such as IV tubing and some types of medical sensors — require a level of biocompatibility so they can be used in the medical field. Essentially, devices that need to be biocompatible are ones that, either directly or indirectly, come in contact with bodily fluids or tissue, creating a need for biomedically safe materials and processes that can function within the human body.

The FDA has requirements for each of these applications, and the designer needs to be mindful of such requirements, selecting the level of compatibility then ensuring approval and operational acceptance.

 
Figure 2. Round coils have lines and spaces in the 5-10µm range that can be used for antennas to transmit and receive signals or as inductors to transmit signals and power from outside the body to inside.

Not all devices will need to be biocompatible, but processes will have to change to be able to produce circuits reliably for the medical field. One way to ensure biomedical compatibility is inserting round coils that can be used for antennas to transmit and receive signals or as inductors to transmit signals and power from outside the body to inside. (Fig. 2).

Material selection

Materials currently used in high-volume circuit applications may not be compatible for micro-medical devices. Biocompatibility is a major requirement for medical devices if they are not completely encapsulated. Biomedical material selection will be difficult at times due to the smaller population of materials that meet the requirements, and materials that can be adapted into current manufacturing processes. 

Material quality will also need to improve as defects that are acceptable at larger line-widths will be rejected at smaller line-widths. Inclusion of foreign material, voids, air bubbles and other visible defects impact customer acceptance of a biocompatible product.

Biocompatible materials will dictate the materials and processes by which circuits are fabricated and engineers will often have to make compromises as prototype designs are evaluated and produced. Many times these processes are at odds with low-cost volume manufacturing and design to cost decisions about correct material selection will have to be carefully made.  

Eventually, as the global volume of micro flexible circuitry increases, the material volume and diversity will increase as material cost decreases. There will continue to be new material advances and discoveries as companies practice continuous process improvement, and grow their inventory of intellectual property (IP). Emerging companies with new ideas and aggressive marketing techniques will push technology along in their quest for market share.

Processing

Different combinations of processes and materials can also aid in producing high-volume micro-circuits where larger size standard technology has often been constrained by process limitations precluding the small sizes. Research into alternate processes — some from the semiconductor industry and some from other previously unrelated fields — can help define the future of the miniature flexible circuitry. In many ways, the development of current micro-circuits came out of developments in the semiconductor industry.

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Manufacturing engineers will be able to optimize the touch labor in the production line by using a variety of process development tools such as a design of experiments (DoE), and/or other similar design packages. Processes can be tailored to existing equipment, and the workplace layout optimized for product flow. 

To expedite product development, some products can be prototyped with commonly used materials, and then, while testing is in process, the materials can be changed out for biocompatible materials. These commonly used materials are more readily available and more cost-effective than the new state-of-the-art biocompatibles. This could lower the cost of the initial prototypes, and separate the two challenges: miniaturization and biocompatibility. Of course, once the design goes to the FDA for approval, it must use the final design, process and materials to secure approval.

Prototype circuits are typically developed at a high cost. The real challenge is taking the defined requirements and making the circuits manufacturable in high volumes, but at low cost. At times, these challenges can be solved with automation, while other cases require modifying the approach to achieve equivalent results. Understanding targets ensures the designer moves in the right direction from the onset of the project. No one wants to find out late in the game that the perfect design cannot be produced at a price that the market will bear. Working with the prototype vendor early on to identify design cost drivers is critical to success.

Costs

Precious metals will be used for many medical devices to make them biocompatible, leading to higher direct material costs. These costs will have to be offset with lower production costs, or result in higher end prices. However, with micro circuits, the percentage of high-cost material content is generally small, thus the total impact on price can be minimal. With an understanding of design needs, materials can often be mixed to better match cost targets.

Devices such as these could command a higher price, but it is easier to gain market share when the price is the same or lower than the currently used device. There will be trade-offs depending on the volume being produced — like the degree of touch labor versus automation or capital investment. With high volume potentials, investments in capital can help take labor cost out of the part and reduce its overall cost to produce.

Suppliers and partners

The search for material and equipment suppliers for this high end market is increasingly difficult. Today’s economy is changing the typical customer. Where once relationships were characterized by suppliers and receivers, the industry is witnessing customers becoming partners.

Partners can work together to optimize design, processes, materials, and equipment to meet specific requirements. These affiliations can result in a higher degree of quality, lower material cost, and higher profit margin for both partners as well as boost throughput and on-time deliveries as well as create production flows that reduce or eliminate the need for large inventories of product or materials.

Conclusion

Production of micro-miniature flexible circuits continues to increase. Miniaturization is still on the steep slope of the learning curve, so the market could see many advances in the near future.  Reductions in unit cost are a daily challenge, and are happening with advances in materials and optimization of processes using the latest manufacturing principles of lean, six-sigma, and statistical process control (SPC). 

Biocompatibility may be a new requirement to some areas of industry, while an alternative requirement to others. Each portion will continue to advance in its own direction, taking advantage of new materials and technology. Maintaining the high degree of quality as different processes are introduced into the high-volume manufacturing environment is achievable with cooperation, dedication, and a drive for innovation. The next challenge is just around the corner.

Jeremy Lug received his bachelor’s degree in microelectronic engineering from Rochester Institute of Technology and is the manager of new product development at Dynamics Research Corporation, Metrigraphics Division, 50 Concord Street, Wilmington, MA 01887; (978) 658-6100; [email protected].

Read more about medical and life sciences technology

(August 4, 2010) — IRphotonics’ iCure Spot curing System has completed qualification and production acceptance with a leading medical device manufacturer in the United States.

Following a six-month evaluation project, the medical device manufacturer has purchased an undisclosed number of iCure units to bond microelectronic components on a disposable medical device. Using the iCure allowed a multiple step and batch  manufacturing process to be streamlined to single piece flow and allowed a cycle time reduction of more than 30 minutes. Under the terms of the agreement, the name of the device manufacturer cannot be disclosed.

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Ruben Burga, VP Sales for IRphotonics commented "The iCure gave consistent and repeatable results throughout the evaluation phase during which the customers’ manufacturing group rigorously evaluated several different alternatives. We are extremely happy to have been selected; it confirms the iCure as an innovative solution ideally suited for automated manufacturing processes requiring rapid adhesive curing and localized heating."

The iCure AS200 is an inline fiber optic system that provides heat by Infrared radiation in a portable unit, delivering pinpoint and accurate control for temperature sensitive substrates and complex devices. Using infrared light to generate heat, the iCure thermal spot curing system combines the advantages of thermal curing with the practicality of spot curing.

Applications include Spot curing of thermal epoxies, bonding and fixing of plastic and glass components, fixing of lenses, temporary fixing of miniature components, precision assembly and bonding of semiconductor components, focused energy for micro soldering, and localized heat welding of thermoplastics.

IRphotonics designs and manufactures infrared fibers and systems used for the transmission of infrared light, and for assembly operations requiring high intensity infrared heat. For more information, visit http://www.icure-irphotonics.com

(August 3, 2010) — Murata Electronics North America debuted an ultra-thin waterproof piezoelectric speaker. With a thickness of 0.9mm, this 19.5 x 14.1mm speaker enables greater design freedom for the rapidly growing and evolving mobile market.

Specific speaker characteristics include an average sound pressure level of 92.0 ±3.0dB (1400Hz ±20%, 5Vrms sine wave, 10cm) and a capacitance of 0.9μF ±30%. The speaker achieves IPX7 grade waterproof protection without a costly waterproof acoustic membrane. Using just ordinary acoustic mesh and double sided tape to seal the speaker to the front cavity, this waterproof speaker application allows for decreased application costs, thin size, and good sound performance. The high torque nature of the speaker’s piezoelectric motor also makes it idea for operation in very small and thin back cavities where dynamic speakers have difficulties. As such, these features make the speaker ideal for mobile phones, music players, digital still cameras, digital video cameras, IC recorders, e-books and other mobile equipment.

There have been numerous indicators that demonstrate the growing trend towards waterproofing mobile equipment. For example, of the 50 new Japanese mobile phone models announced in late 2010, almost one in four were waterproof. “We developed this waterproof speaker based on feedback from our customers and market trends,” said Peter Tiller, senior group product manager, Murata Electronics North America. “Too often we hear of consumers losing a phone or camera due to accidental submersion in water. We hope our new speaker will allow more mobile consumer products to be waterproof and survive life’s little accidents.”

Further information can be found at http://www.murata-northamerica.com

Visit the MEMS center for more articles on MEMS sensors, microfluidics, and more: http://www.electroiq.com/index/nanotech-mems/mems.html

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(August 3, 2010) — A newly discovered nanomaterial could improve healthcare devices by increasing energy storage, help realize implantable microchips, or make better drugs. Scientists at the University of Texas have created silicon nanoneedles with modulated porosity. The nanoporous needles are flexible, semiconductors, biodegradable, and have a surface one hundred times larger that of solid nanowires.

Figure 1. A side view of a forest of bicolor nanoneedles. A central low porosity segment is green and two siding high porosity segments are red. An ultrathin porous wire crosses the picture sideways, in yellow.

These unique properties of the nanowires will provide a higher energy density when used as large surface anodes in lithium batteries; constitute the active elements of bioresorbable, flexible microchips for subcutaneous implants; or protect drugs while in the body and release them in a controlled manner to improve their therapeutic effect.

Figure 2. Bicolor nanoneedles seen from an angle. The high porosity segment is red and low porosity segment is green. The grass-like flexibility of the nanowires allows the tips to join.

“We have indicated that the novel combination of nanoscale dimensions of the needles with their flexibility, ability to conduct electricity, degrade in the body and have the ‘surface of a tennis court’ on the tip of your thumb is crucial to develop lithium batteries that can store more energy, produce integrated circuits (ICs) that can be implanted in the body, and deliver drugs more efficiently. All these components are necessary to design better healthcare devices” says Mauro Ferrari, chair of the NanoMedicine and Biomedical Engineering Department.

Figure 3. A forest of evenly spaced cylindrical nanoneedles. The diameter is 100nm and allows piercing of cell membrane without harming the cells.

Conducted by researchers at the department of NanoMedicine and Biomedical Engineering at the University of Texas, the study reports the use of a new, rapid and inexpensive etch mechanism that uses silver nanoparticles to form nanoneedles from silicon. The needles are synthesized in a solution of hydrogen peroxide. The porosity is controlled along the length of the needle by simply changing the concentration of peroxide over time. The porosity causes the needles to biodegrade in a predictable way over time, and gives them a surface 120 times larger than that of corresponding solid wires while maintaining the semiconductor and crystalline nature.

The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the state of Texas.

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“We can control the size and shape of the porous structure using the same technology currently used to make computer microchips, and we are doing it to make needles with a tip smaller than 100nm. This will allow us to penetrate directly within many cells at once and delivery drugs very specifically inside them without killing the cell,” says Ciro Chiappini, leading author of the study and researcher at the University of Texas at Austin.

The researchers have also shown that they can control the dissolution of the needles over several days and thus determine the life of the resulting implantable device. They can also control the color of the needles through porosity to design nanoneedles barcodes with codebars of different colors. Since porous silicon is not harmful to cells these barcodes can be used to tag cells and chemical reactions. “The barcodes are a very efficient system to identify cells in the natural environment without altering their functions, and we will use them to track movement of multiple cells at once. That is what I’m working on right now” says Jean Raymond Fakhoury, another author of the study.

The university research is the cover story in July 25th Advanced Functional Materials, http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/123537708/abstract

August 2, 201 – Researchers at Rice U. have developed a "white" version of graphene that could help insulate and better control that material’s electronic behavior, and it’s compatible with R2R manufacturing.

Their work, published in the online journal Nano Letters, looks at how to make sheets of hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN). Earlier this year Rice scientists looked at implanting islands of h-BN into sheets of graphene. Now, prof. Pulickel Ajayan et al. have figured out how to deposit entire sheets of pure h-BN (which is white in its bulk form) using chemical vapor deposition (CVD, ~1000°C) with 1-5 atoms thickness on a 5×5cm copper substrate, and then stripped off and transferred to other substrates.


(Left) A transmission electron microscope image shows one-atom-thick layers of hexagonal boron nitride edge-on.
(Right) A selected area electron diffraction of an h-BN layer. (Credit Li Song/Rice University)

Put together, this "white graphene" can be used as a dielectric substrate for graphene electronics, in a bid to find the next electronics base material to replace silicon. From their paper abstract (image source too):

These atomic films show a large optical energy band gap of 5.5eV and are highly transparent over a broad wavelength range. The mechanical properties of the h-BN films, measured by nanoindentation, show 2D elastic modulus in the range of 200-500N/m, which is corroborated by corresponding theoretical calculations.

 

The paper’s primary author Li Song, says it should also be possible to draw microscopic patterns of graphene and h-BN to create nanoscale field-effect transistors (FET), quantum capacitors, or biosensors. The process should be adaptable to roll-to-roll (R2R) manufacturing used to make 30-in. graphene sheets, limited only by the size of the copper foil and furnace used to grow it. "If you have a huge furnace, you can go large," he said.

The research was funded by Rice University, the Office of Naval Research MURI program on graphene, the DoE’s Basic Energy Science division of the Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, the Welch Foundation, the International Balzan Foundation, and the Chinese State Scholarship Fund.

(August 2, 2010) — Carl Zeiss SMT debuted an integrated gas injection system on the ORION Plus Helium Ion Microscope. The gas injector reportedly delivers superior nanofabrication, deposition and etch.

Tungsten Pillar deposited with Helium Ion Beam (7700nm tall and 45nm diameter) (Photo: Business Wire)

The combination of a sub-nanometer (<0.35nm) probe of inert gas ions with a small interaction volume at the sample surface enables highly precise induction chemistries. The resulting structures have extremely small dimensions and high profile fidelity.

Dr. Paul Alkemade at the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience, Delft University of Technology, is one of the early researchers in helium ion-induced deposition and etching. According to Dr. Alkemade, "The optimum instrument for nanofabrication requires both high spatial resolution and high deposition efficiency. Fortunately, the Helium ion beam on the ORION Plus instrument provides resolution for deposition that is even better than that achieved by a scanning electron microscope (SEM). In addition, the Helium ion beam provides deposition efficiencies that are very similar to those achieved with a heavy ion (Ga) focused ion beam (FIB) instrument. With the integration of a Gas Injection System, the ORION Helium Ion Microscope is proving to be the right instrument for nanofabrication research." Read more about nano production equipment here: 

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http://www.electroiq.com/index/nanotech-mems/tools-equipment.html

The controls for the Gas Injection System (GIS) are integrated through the ORION Plus system software. The GIS unit contains three crucibles capable of delivering metal and insulator deposition and insulator etch chemistries. User programmable recipes can be created and recalled allowing for complex deposition and etch processes. The Gas Injection System on the Orion Plus creates a powerful and flexible platform enabling state-of-the-art nanofabrication applications.

Carl Zeiss SMT AG comprises the Semiconductor Technology Group of the Carl Zeiss Group. Carl Zeiss SMT manufactures lithography optics and light, electron and ion-optical inspection, analysis and measuring systems. Further information is available at www.smt.zeiss.com

Other Carl Zeiss SMT product news:

Carl Zeiss debuts SEM with enhanced resolution in the low kv region 

Carl Zeiss delivers "complete" optics for production EUV

Zeiss debuts "correlative microscopy" elements

Zeiss touts particle analysis add-on for SEMs

Carl Zeiss adds nanopatterning engine for FIB/SEMs

Zeiss adds variable pressure to Sigma FE-SEMs 

(July 30, 2010) — Protochips announced the Poseidon solution for in situ characterization of materials in liquid directly within the transmission electron microscope (TEM). Poseidon allows scientists and engineers to image both materials and biological samples that are self-contained within a fully hydrated environment, effectively creating the native environment of a sample directly within the TEM. Samples and processes that previously required freezing or were unable to be imaged live or in their operating environment can now be studied directly in their native liquid environment while observing in real time.

Using the Protochips E-Chip consumable technology for sample supports, Poseidon is an in situ solution that allows scientists and engineers high performance and flexibility for liquid in-situ electron microscopy. By choosing from the Poseidon family of E-Chip consumables, users can configure their liquid environment on a per-experiment basis, including volume and flow path, to address the needs of their particular experiment and sample. By allowing users to configure Poseidon though their choice of E-Chips, the highest resolutions in liquid are possible, with nanoscale resolution through several microns of liquid already demonstrated. This makes Poseidon the perfect choice for applications including cells and cellular processes, gels and soft materials, nanoparticle dispersions, batteries, catalysts, mixing and other fully hydrated samples and phenomena. Poseidon is a self-contained TEM holder with external components that does not require any modification to existing TEMs. This makes Poseidon suitable for new and existing electron microscopes. Read more about TEMs and other analytical equipment here: http://www.electroiq.com/index/nanotech-mems/tools-equipment/analytical-equipment.html

"Two of the most important features the in situ market has requested are flexibility and ease of use. No two samples are identical, and the Poseidon solution offers an unprecedented set of features, performance and flexibility needed to finally make in-situ liquid microscopy a viable commercial solution," stated David Nackashi, CEO of Protochips Inc.

Protochips provides products and technologies for the in situ electron microscopy market. More information can be found at www.protochips.com.

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(July 29, 2010) — Graphene, a sheet of pure carbon and a possible replacement for silicon-based semiconductors, has been found to have a unique property that could make it even more suitable for future electronic devices. When subjected to a 3-point stretch, graphene sprouts nanobubbles with electrons moving as if subjected to a strong magnetic field. The discovery was made by physicists at the University of California, Berkeley, and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL).

Figure. A scanning tunneling microscope image of a single layer of graphene on platinum with four nanobubbles at the graphene-platinum border and one in the patch interior. The inset shows a high-resolution image of a graphene nanobubble and its distorted honeycomb lattice due to strain in the bubble. (Source: Crommie lab, UC Berkeley)

Specifically, the electrons within each nanobubble segregate into quantized energy levels instead of occupying energy bands, as in unstrained graphene. The energy levels are identical to those that an electron would occupy if it were moving in circles in a very strong magnetic field, as high as 300 tesla, which is bigger than any laboratory can produce except in brief explosions, said Michael Crommie, professor of physics at UC Berkeley and a faculty researcher at LBNL. Magnetic resonance imagers use magnets less than 10 tesla, while the Earth’s magnetic field at ground level is 31 microtesla.

"This gives us a new handle on how to control how electrons move in graphene, and thus to control graphene’s electronic properties, through strain," Crommie said. "By controlling where the electrons bunch up and at what energy, you could cause them to move more easily or less easily through graphene, in effect, controlling their conductivity, optical or microwave properties. Control of electron movement is the most essential part of any electronic device."

Crommie and colleagues report the discovery in the July 30 issue of the journal Science

Aside from the engineering implications of the discovery, Crommie is eager to use this unusual property of graphene to explore how electrons behave in fields that until now have been unobtainable in the laboratory.

"When you crank up a magnetic field you start seeing very interesting behavior because the electrons spin in tiny circles," he said. "This effect gives us a new way to induce this behavior, even in the absence of an actual magnetic field."

Among the unusual behaviors observed of electrons in strong magnetic fields are the quantum Hall effect and the fractional quantum Hall effect, where at low temperatures electrons also fall into quantized energy levels.

The new effect was discovered by accident when a UC Berkeley postdoctoral researcher and several students in Crommie’s lab grew graphene on the surface of a platinum crystal. Graphene is a one atom-thick sheet of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal pattern, like chicken wire. When grown on platinum, the carbon atoms do not perfectly line up with the metal surface’s triangular crystal structure, which creates a strain pattern in the graphene as if it were being pulled from three different directions.

The strain produces small, raised triangular graphene bubbles 4 to 10 nanometers across in which the electrons occupy discrete energy levels rather than the broad, continuous range of energies allowed by the band structure of unstrained graphene. This new electronic behavior was detected spectroscopically by scanning tunneling microscopy. These so-called Landau levels are reminiscent of the quantized energy levels of electrons in the simple Bohr model of the atom, Crommie said.

The appearance of a pseudomagnetic field in response to strain in graphene was first predicted for carbon nanotubes in 1997 by Charles Kane and Eugene Mele of the University of Pennsylvania. Nanotubes are a rolled up form of graphene. Within the last year, however, Francisco Guinea of the Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid in Spain, Mikhael Katsnelson of Radboud University of Nijmegen, the Netherlands, and A. K. Geim of the University of Manchester, England predicted what they termed a pseudo quantum Hall effect in strained graphene. This is the very quantization that Crommie’s research group has experimentally observed. Boston University physicist Antonio Castro Neto, who was visiting Crommie’s laboratory at the time of the discovery, immediately recognized the implications of the data, and subsequent experiments confirmed that it reflected the pseudo quantum Hall effect predicted earlier.

"Theorists often latch onto an idea and explore it theoretically even before the experiments are done, and sometimes they come up with predictions that seem a little crazy at first. What is so exciting now is that we have data that shows these ideas are not so crazy," Crommie said. "The observation of these giant pseudomagnetic fields opens the door to room-temperature ‘straintronics,’ the idea of using mechanical deformations in graphene to engineer its behavior for different electronic device applications."
Crommie noted that the "pseudomagnetic fields" inside the nanobubbles are so high that the energy levels are separated by hundreds of millivolts, much higher than room temperature. Thus, thermal noise would not interfere with this effect in graphene even at room temperature. The nanobubble experiments performed in Crommie’s laboratory, however, were performed at very low temperature.

Normally, electrons moving in a magnetic field circle around the field lines. Within the strained nanobubbles, the electrons move in circles in the plane of the graphene sheet, as if a strong magnetic field has been applied perpendicular to the sheet even when there is no actual magnetic field. Apparently, Crommie said, the pseudomagnetic field only affects moving electrons and not other properties of the electron, such as spin, that are affected by real magnetic fields.

Other authors of the report, in addition to Crommie, Castro Neto and Guinea, are Sarah Burke, now a professor at the University of British Columbia; Niv Levy, now a postdoctoral researcher at the National Institute of Technology and Standards; and graduate student Kacey L. Meaker, undergraduate Melissa Panlasigui and physics professor Alex Zettl of UC Berkeley. The research was funded through the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science and the U.S. Office of Naval Research.

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