Tag Archives: Small Times Magazine

August 10, 2011 – BUSINESS WIRE — Carl Zeiss Nano Technology Systems, CEOS GmbH, and the University of Ulm have completed 2 years of evaluation and are starting the second phase of the Sub Angstrom Low Voltage Electron Microscope (SALVE) project.

SALVE aims to create a transmission electron microscope (TEM) capable of imaging samples with atomic resolution at very low acceleration voltages. Medium-voltage TEMs with accelerating voltages of 200-300kV destroy radiation-sensitive samples prior to image capture and material analysis. Sample preparation methods are also being researched.

The SALVE project’s goal is to overcome the hurdle that lower accelerating voltages lead to significant optical aberrations. Phase 1, 2009-2011, showed that atomic-resolution images could be generated at accelerating voltages below 80kV.

The German Research Foundation (DFG) and the Ministry for Science, Research and Art from the Federal State of Baden-Wuerttemberg (MWK/BW) support the SALVE project Phase 2 with €3.2 million (DFG) and €2.1 million (MWK/BW).

The SALVE TEM technology could be used to study superconductors and semiconductors, as well as lithium-ion batteries (Li-ion), plastics, and biological materials.

Carl Zeiss will work on developing the microscope system; the University of Ulm will develop applications and research sample preparation methods; CEOS will work on an optimized corrector to compensate for the chromatic and the spherical aberration at low voltages.

The Carl Zeiss Group develops optical and opto-electronic products. Carl Zeiss NTS GmbH is the Nano Technology Systems Division of Carl Zeiss, focused on electron microscopy. Learn more at www.smt.zeiss.com/nts.

August 9, 2011 – FEI has released a new version of its DualBeam system, offering a highly configurable platform to provide high-resolution, three-dimensional (3D) imaging and analysis on a wide range of sample types in materials research, life sciences, electronics, and geoscience applications.

The tool is available with either high vacuum-only or high and low vacuum electron imaging hardware. Low vacuum electron imaging capabilities allows the system to accommodate contaminating or outgassing samples that are incompatible with high vacuum operation. Low vacuum also provides the ability to compensate for charge build up in non conductive samples even at the high currents required for analysis techniques, such as energy dispersive (x-ray) spectroscopy (EDS) and electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD).

The platform can also be configured with FEI’s low vacuum capabilities and even environmental scanning electron microscopy (ESEM) for in situ analysis. Features also include advanced SEM scanning and FIB patterning, plus the company’s SmartSCAN and Drift Corrected Frame Integration (DCFI) to facilitate electron beam imaging of sample types with a range of different properties. Advanced backscattered electron, as well as secondary electron and ion detectors, collect a wide variety of topographic, elemental and compositional information. Capabilities include the latest AutoSlice & View G3 software option, versatile electron imaging hardware, and high-throughput ion column Milling (with positive ions) and imaging or drift suppression (with electrons) provides a unique synergy for automation of 3D serial slicing, imaging and analysis of both electrically conductive and non-conductive samples. When combined with EDS or EBSD, EDS3 and EBS3 software options can also be used to reconstruct elemental maps or crystallographic orientation data in 3D.

August 9, 2011 – LumaSense Technologies launched a digital-ratio, two-color pyrometer that allows industrial manufacturers to measure extreme temperatures in harsh environments: the ISR 6 Advanced.

The ISR 6 Advanced is a non-contact pyrometer for processing steel and metals, silicon, glass and cement. The sensor suits temperature ranges between 600-3,000°C, such as those in induction heating, annealing, welding, forging, melting, sintering, or crystal growth tools.

Spot size goes down to 0.7mm. Response time is <2ms.

If needed, the pyrometer can be switched to 1-color mode and used like a conventional pyrometer.

August 5, 2011 – Rice University’s James Tour’s Lab has created thin films from graphene that eliminate expensive, brittle indium tin oxide (ITO) films for touchscreen displays, solar panels, and LED lights. The see-through graphene-hybrid film is flexible, allowing integration into body-wearable electronics or building integrated photovoltaics (BIPV), among other commercial applications.

Rice University’s hybrid graphene/aluminum mesh material. (Credit: Yu Zhu, Rice University)

The Tour Lab’s thin film combines a single-layer sheet of highly conductive graphene with a fine grid of metal nanowire. The combination outperformed ITO and competing materials at the Lab, offering better transparency and lower electrical resistance. The hybrid works better than pure graphene, which interacts too much with its substrate, Tour said. The fine metal mesh maintains conductivity without blocking transparency, added postdoctoral researcher Yu Zhu. The gaps in the nanowires make them unsuitable stand-alone components in conductive electrodes. The researchers settled on a grid of 5um aluminum nanowires.

Standard roll-to-roll (R2R) and ink-jet printing could produce the metal grids on a commercial scale. Roll-to-roll graphene production is also becoming more readily available from nanomaterials manufacturing companies. Tour believes the ITO replacement can be scaled up immediately.

An electron microscope image of a hybrid electrode developed at Rice University shows solid connections after 500 bends. (Credit: Tour Lab, Rice University.)

In tests, the hybrid film’s conductivity decreased 20%-30% with the initial 50 bends, but after that the material stabilizes. "There were no significant variations up to 500 bending cycles," Zhu said. More rigorous bending test should be performed by commercial users, he added.

The film also proved environmentally stable. When the research paper was submitted in late 2010, test films had been exposed to the environment in the lab for six months without deterioration. After a year, they remain so.

Yu Zhu holds a sample of a transparent electrode that merges graphene and a fine aluminum grid. Clockwise from top right: James Tour, Zhu, Zheng Yan, and Zhengzong Sun. (Credit: Jeff Fitlow, Rice University.)

The Office of Naval Research Graphene MURI program, the Air Force Research Laboratory through the University Technology Corporation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Lockheed Martin Corp./LANCER IV program supported the research.

The research was reported in the online edition of ACS Nano. James Tour is Rice’s T.T. and W.F. Chao Chair in Chemistry as well as a professor of mechanical engineering and materials science and of computer science. Yu Zhu is lead author on the paper. Rice graduate students Zhengzong Sun and Zheng Yan and former postdoctoral researcher Zhong Jin are co-authors of the paper.

August 4, 2011 – BUSINESS WIRE — Epson Electronics America (EEA) launched two new series of sensing platforms, based on Epson’s QMEMS and semiconductor technologies. The new Epson evaluation tools will help developers create and evaluate consumer applications that incorporate motion and position sensing. The E Series consists of two multifunction sensor evaluation units; the M Series are compact, specialized evaluation modules.

Companies with core competencies in software development, and small firms without extensive hardware development resources can use the new sensing platform series to advance their motion sensing technology in consumer applications, said Bob Porooshani, GM of the Microelectronics Operations Division of Epson Electronics America (EEA). Users do not need sensor evaluation expertise to perform applications development.

The sensing platforms combine Epson’s high-stability QMEMS quartz gyroscopic (angular rate) sensors with its semiconductor technology, such as sensor processors and GPS devices. They process and digitize sensor data then display and store the data via various interfaces (wired, wireless).

The E Series kits have a six-axis sensor, which consists of three Epson gyroscopes that provide high accuracy and stability (±1,000 deg/s) on three axes, and a triaxial accelerometer with a dynamic range of ±6 G, a triaxial geomagnetic sensor and a pressure sensor. These evaluation units are available with either a ZigBee or a USB interface for easy connection to a PC. An accessory board can enable new interfaces and provide power for use in a wider range of evaluation environments.

The M Series consists of more compact and easier-to-use sensor evaluation modules with specialized sensor functions. The S7U4E002002 is a highly accurate motion sensor with six degrees of freedom; the S7U4E002003 is a position sensor with a GPS receiver. Each can easily be built into portable, hand-held evaluation equipment. A micro-USB interface board (sold separately) is also available for performing evaluations in a PC environment.

Epson Electronics America, Inc. (EEA), is the North American sales, marketing and engineering arm of the Epson Microdevices Operations Division of Seiko Epson Corporation. For more information, please visit www.eea.epson.com

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August 4, 2011 — Attolight AG is launching a quantitative cathodoluminescence system with nanoscale resolution and picosecond timing for research and product development in semiconductor, ceramics, advanced materials, geological, solar panel, and LED sectors.  

The cathodluminescence system runs the full spectrum from UV to IR while maintaining 10nm spatial resolution. It offers a 15K to 300K temperature range. Field of view (FOV) and collection efficiency are reportedly 100x better than other CL technologies.
 
The system is based on a newly designed scanning electron microscope (SEM) containing an embedded optical microscope, a 9-axis cryo nano-stage, and a fully integrated cathodoluminescence system. 

Available in two versions, the continuous wave CL 10-Infinity can be field-upgraded to the pico-second, time-resolved CL10-10. 

See the new system, and a paper on time-resolved spectroscopy at M&M, August 7-11, Nashville TN, Microscopy.org. Attolight Booth #1520.

Attolight is a spin-off from EPFL’s Institute of Quantum Electronics and Photonics in Lausanne, Switzerland. For further details, visit www.Attolight.com.

MANCEF announce that the Commercialization of Micro-and Nano-Systems (COMS) 2011 conference will be held in Greensboro, North Carolina, August 28th – 31st, 2011, at the Grandover Resort. MANCEF said North Carolina is a hotbed of small technology activity; with 35 nanotech university research centers, over 80 nanobiotech and nanotechnology companies, home of the Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering, Semiconductor Research Corporation, renowned engineering programs at the University of North Carolina and Duke University, and companies such as Coventor, RF Micro Devices, Inc. and MEMSCAP.

The conference is hosted by the Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering (JSNN), with the support of Research Triangle Institute (RTI) and the NC Center of innovation for Nanobiotechnology (NC COIN).  

Plenary speakers include Anthony Atala, Institute for Regenerative Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine; J. Charles Barbour, Director – Physical, Chemical, and Nano Sciences Center, Sandia National Laboratories; Joseph DeSimone, Chancellor’s Eminent Professor of Chemistry, UNC; and Paul M. Zavracky, President of NA and European Operations, MEMSIC Corporation.

August 3, 2011 – PRNewswire — Resonetics introduces the RapidX250 laser micromachining system for micro electro mechanical system (MEMS), microfluidics, and medical device fabrication. The rapid prototyping tool best suits university research.

The system’s tolerances are nearly 1µm. The multi-wavelength excimer laser (193nm and 248nm) directly fabricates micro electronic structures in one step, eschewing traditional lithography processes.

The RapidX250 micro fabricates 2D sheets and tubes and 3D balloons or non-planar surfaces. Structures can be formed in XYZ, theta and goniometer. At 193nm, the laser can ablate fluropolymers (nylon, pebax, Teflon), bioabsorbable polymers, and glass. A quick exchange system allows users to switch to 248nm to machine polymers, ceramic and metals (such as stents). A DXF file-to-CNC converter is included for a multi-user environment.

Resonetics provides laser micromachining products and services, comprising The Medical Division, The Laser Micromachining Division (for Contract Manufacturing Services) and The Laser Systems Division (for capital equipment). Learn more at www.resonetics.com

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The Rice University lab of Professor Pulickel Ajayan has packed an entire lithium ion energy storage device into a single nanowire, as reported this month in the American Chemical Society journal Nano Letters. The researchers believe their creation is as small as such devices can possibly get, and could be valuable as a rechargeable power source for new generations of nanoelectronics.

The Rice University lab of Pulickel Ajayan developed the device, described as an ultrathin battery/supercapacitor hybrid containing thousands of nanowires, each of which is a fully functional battery.

In their paper, researchers described testing two versions of their battery/supercapacitor hybrid. The first is a sandwich with nickel/tin anode, polyethylene oxide (PEO) electrolyte and polyaniline cathode layers; it was built as proof that lithium ions would move efficiently through the anode to the electrolyte and then to the supercapacitor-like cathode, which stores the ions in bulk and gives the device the ability to charge and discharge quickly.

The second packs the same capabilities into a single nanowire. The researchers built centimeter-scale arrays containing thousands of nanowire devices, each about 150nm wide.

Ajayan’s team has been inching toward single-nanowire devices for years. The researchers first reported the creation of three-dimensional nanobatteries last December. In that project, they encased vertical arrays of nickel-tin nanowires in PMMA, a widely used polymer best known as Plexiglas, which served as an electrolyte and insulator. They grew the nanowires via electrodeposition in an anodized alumina template atop a copper substrate. They widened the template’s pores with a simple chemical etching technique that created a gap between the wires and the alumina, and then drop-coated PMMA to encase the wires in a smooth, consistent sheath. A chemical wash removed the template and left a forest of electrolyte-encased nanowires. 

In that battery, the encased nickel-tin was the anode, but the cathode had to be attached on the outside. The new process tucks the cathode inside the nanowires, said Ajayan, a professor of mechanical engineering and materials science. In this feat of nanoengineering, the researchers used PEO as the gel-like electrolyte that stores lithium ions and also serves as an electrical insulator between nanowires in an array.

After much trial and error, they settled on an easily synthesized polymer known as polyaniline (PANI) as their cathode. Drop-coating the widened alumina pores with PEO coats the insides, encases the anodes and leaves tubes at the top into which PANI cathodes could also be drop-coated. An aluminum current collector placed on top of the array completes the circuit.

"The idea here is to fabricate nanowire energy storage devices with ultrathin separation between the electrodes," said Arava Leela Mohana Reddy, a research scientist at Rice and co-author of the paper. "This affects the electrochemical behavior of the device. Our devices could be a very useful tool to probe nanoscale phenomena."

The team’s experimental batteries are about 50 microns tall, but theoretically, the nanowire energy storage devices can be as long and wide as the templates allow, which makes them scalable.

The nanowire devices show good capacity; the researchers are fine-tuning the materials to increase their ability to repeatedly charge and discharge, which now drops off after about 20 cycles.

"There’s a lot to be done to optimize the devices in terms of performance," said the paper’s lead author, Sanketh Gowda, a chemical engineering graduate student at Rice. "Optimization of the polymer separator and its thickness and an exploration of different electrode systems could lead to improvements." Rice graduate student Xiaobo Zhan is a co-author of the paper.

August 2, 2011 — Multitest, test equipment maker, added a new application to its micro electro mechanical systems (MEMS) test and calibration portfolio, MT MEMS tester, testing 3D earth magnetic field sensors for mobile applications and GPS-free state-of-the-art navigation applications.

In addition to being an alternative to using the earth’s magnetic field, the application also can be configured with external magnetic coils. This configuration provides high magnetic force at the highest accuracy.

The MT MEMS tester is part of Multitest’s modular MEMS test platform, targeting low-cost test and incorporating multiple degrees of freedom (DOF) test. It can be combined with low-g accelerometer test and other parameters.

The new equipment for 3D earth magnetic field sensor tests has been in high volume production for several months. Multitest manufactures test equipment — test handlers, contactors, and ATE printed circuit boards — for semiconductors. For more information, visit www.multitest.com.

Also read: STMicroelectronics releases line of geo-magnetic modules

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