welcome to the 2nd annual nanoscientific symposium on scanning probe microscopy (spm) ·...
TRANSCRIPT
Held at the Park Nanoscience Center at SUNY Polytechnic Institute
257 Fuller Road, Albany, NY
WELCOME TO THE 2ND ANNUAL NANOSCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM ON
SCANNING PROBE MICROSCOPY (SPM)
SPONSORED BY:
A venue for nanoscience researchers, scientists and engineersto learn about the latest studies being formed using SPM
NanoScientific SymposiumsIn 2018, NanoScientific Symposiums were introduced and offered to all engineers and researchers working in nanoscience, research & nanotechnology to offer an opportunity for knowledge-sharing in worldwide technical forums and workshops. This year, NanoScientific expanded to six events across three continents, bringing leading experts on SPM from around the world together, culminating in this week’s 2nd Annual NanoScientific Symposium US. The events in Tianjin (China), Suwon (South Korea), Bologna (Italy), Singapore, Mexico City, and Albany, NY (USA), have featured topics that span the ever-growing fields benefitting from Scanning Probe Microscopy, including: Nanoelectronics, 2D Devices, 3D-AFM techniques, Photovoltaic Technologies, Electrochemical Imaging and the Intersection of Nanotechnology and Biology. As planning begins for NanoScientific Events in 2020, expect to see an expansion in the geographic diversity of locations, and the number of symposiums held.
About Park SystemsSince going public and listing on KOSDAQ in 2016, Park Systems’ stock has quadrupled as they continue to lead the world in growing AFM market share. Park Systems, a global AFM manufacturer, has Nanoscience Centers in key cities worldwide, including: Santa Clara, CA; Albany, NY; Beijing, China; Tokyo, Japan; Bangalore, India; Singapore; Heidelberg, Germany; and Suwon and Seoul, South Korea. Park Systems offers a complete range of products for researchers and industry engineers in the chemistry, materials, physics, life sciences, and semiconductor and data storage industries. Park’s products are used by more than a thousand institutions and corporations worldwide, and provide the highest data accuracy at nanoscale resolution, superior productivity, and the lowest operating cost. Please visit http://www.parksystems.com or call 408-986-1110 for more information.
About NanoScientific PublicationsNanoScientific Magazine is published quarterly to showcase advancements in the field of nanoscience and nanotechnology across a wide range of multi-disciplinary areas of research. Each issue covers informative articles about nanotechnology trends, balanced with leading edge scientific research applications and concepts. NanoScientific has been published since 2014 and has a global distribution of over 30,000 in North America, Europe and Asia. NanoScientific Symposiums are held annually around the world to share scientific knowledge and foster ongoing relationships in the field of nanotechnology. Please visit http://www.NanoScientific.org.
Keibock LeePresident of Park SystemsSponsor of NanoScientific Symposiums
“The NanoScientific Symposiums on SPM sponsored by Park Systems have given attendees the latest updates in SPM, an opportunity to present their research papers, attend
a special short course on Atomic Force Microscopes and foster ongoing relationships within the field of nanotechnology.”
Mirrors for Earth’s Energy Rebalancing (MEER:reflEction)Immediately ending carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions will not be enough to solve the climate crisis; we also need to stabilize the Earth’s temperature by compensating the loss of albedo from short-lived anthropogenic aerosols. Effectively addressing the complex issue requires simultaneously solving three individually challenging problems: (1) planetary overheating, (2) energy production, and (3) ocean acidification. MEER:ReflEction is a grand, versatile, and feasible approach to addressing the imminent urgency of climate change due to temperature increase and ocean acidification while reshaping our energy production and consumption to renewable energy. MEER:ReflEction applies aluminum-coated glass mirror arrays to most efficiently achieve (1) solar radiation management for albedo control, (2) renewable energy production, and (3) carbon dioxide drawdown through ocean liming using solar thermally produced calcium oxide (CaO). We find full deployment on land and at sea within 10 years both necessary and affordable.
Speaker Spotlight:
Ye TaoRowland Fellow Harvard University
La micropscopia con sonda de exploración (SPM) se ha convertido en el método clásico para estudiar nanoestructuras y se usa ampliamente para la evaluación cualitativa de propiedades físicas y químicas y parámetros geométricos de dimensiones de menos de unos pocos nanómetros", comenta Keibock Lee, presidente de Park Systems, patrocinador de simposios nanocientíficos."El Simposio nanocientífico es una plataforma única para reunir a la comunidad de nanociencia para mostrar los últimos avances en SPM y si no puede asistir al evento, la transmisión en vivo le dará la oportunidad de conectarse virtualmente".
En 2019, se presentaron y ofrecieron Simposios Nanocientíficos a todos los ingenieros e investigadores que trabajan en nanociencia, investigación y nanotecnología para ofrecer una oportunidad de intercambio de conocimientos en foros y talleres técnicos mundiales.El Simposio nanocientífico ofrece tres simposios sobre microscopía de sonda de barrido (SPM) este año que reúne a los principales expertos mundiales en SPM para obtener ideas pioneras sobre este apasionante tema.El Simposio nanocientífico sobre SPM se llevará a cabo en la Facultad de Química, UNAM, del 3 al 4 de octubre, y contará con una presentación especial del Dr. Rigoberto Advíncula, Y Director Ejecutivo, Centro de Metrología a nanoescala. Este evento también incluirá un taller de AFM en la USAII.
NanoScientific Symposiums
NANOscientific
Resource-driven engineering to leverage Earth’s chemistriesTo immediately offer remediation
8:00 am
Morning Session 08:40 am
8:45 am
9:15 am
9:45 am
10:15 am
10:30 am
11:00 am
11:30 am
12:00 pm
November 19-20, SUNY Polytechnic Institute, Albany, NY
NanoScientific Symposium US Scanning Probe Microscopy (SPM) Program
NANO
Day One Tuesday November 19, 2019NanoFab South Auditorium
Breakfast
WelcomeKeibock LeePresident, Park Systems
Featured SpeakersDr. Rigoberto Advincula, Professor, Department of Macromolecular Science and Engineering, Case Western Reserve University; Research Professor, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, University of Houston; Editor-in-chief, MRS Communications
Nanostructured and Smart Interfaces
Dr. Ye Tao, Rowland Fellow, The Rowland Institute at Harvard
Mirrors for Earth’s Energy Rebalancing (MEER:reflEction)
Prof. Jia Deng, Assistant Professor, Department of Systems Science and Industrial Engineering
External Energy Assisted Nanomachining Using Soft AFM Probes
Morning Break – NanoFab South Rotunda
Dr. Ji Ung Lee, Professor of Nanoscale Engineering, SUNY Polytechnic Institute
2D Reconfigurable Devices
Phil Kaszuba, Senior Member of Technical Staff and Lead Engineer, Scanning Probe Microscopy (SPM) Laboratory, Global Foundries
Scanning Capacitance Spectroscopy for Dopant Analysis on Nanoscale Semiconductor Devices
Dr. Lane Baker, James L. Jackson Professor of Chemistry, Indiana University
Measuring Ions and Electrons with Nanoscale Pipettes
LUNCH – NanoFab South Rotunda
NANO
November 19-20, SUNY Polytechnic Institute, Albany, NY
NanoScientific Symposium US Scanning Probe Microscopy (SPM) Program
Afternoon Session
1:00 pm
1:30 pm
2:00 pm
2:30 pm
2:45 pm
3:00 pm
3:15 pm
3:30 pm
3:45 pm
Dr. Jin-Woo Han, Scientist, USRA Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science, NASA Ames Research Center
Nanoscale Vacuum Channel Transistor on Silicon and Silicon Carbide
Dr. MartinEdwards, Research Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry, University of Utah
Nanoscale Electrochemical Imaging
Dr. Nathaniel Cady, Professor, Colleges of Nanoscale Science & Engineering, SUNY Polytechnic Institute
Probing the Intersection of Nanotechnology and Biology
Afternoon Break – NanoFab South Rotunda
Oral & Poster Presentations
Vineet Khullar, University of Tennessee-Knoxville
Nanoscale Measurements of Optical Properties Using Surface Plasmon Tunneling
Xin Ning, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Nanoparticle Assembly Through Polyethylene Crystallization
Leo Sifringer, The Rowland Institute at Harvard
Electron-beam machining with sub-atomic depth resolution
Jun Liu, University at Buffalo
SPM Study of Tribo-Photovaltaic Effect in Metal/Semiconductor Moving Contacts
James Olson, Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteDigital Twin Microscopy: A Conceptual Model for Sub-Nanoscale Exploration
Hoa Le, The Rowland Institute at Harvard3D Nanoscaffold Cantilevers for Potential Applications in High-Speed Wafer-Scale Imaging
Day One Tuesday November 19, 2019NanoFab South Auditorium
4:00 pm
Confidential and Proprietary 2
Time Program
09:10 – 09:20Opening Remarks Keibock Lee, Editor-in-Chief NanoScientific Publications
09:20 – 09:30Associate Professor Zhu ChunxiangWelcome Message National University of Singapore
09:30 – 10:10Dr. Sang-Joon ChoLatest advances in atomic force microscopy and its direction Park Systems
10:10 – 10:20 Open Discussion (Q&A)
10:20 – 10:40 Tea Break
10:40 – 11:00
Dr. Zhao YunshanProbing the thermal and mechanical properties of low-dimensional materials National University of Singapore
11:00 – 11:20
Dr. Sreetosh GoswamiSpatial mapping of ultralow energy switching in an organic memristor National University of Singapore, Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Institute
11:20 – 12:00Mr. John YikMetrology tool in semiconductor manufacturing Industrial Metrology Consultant
12:00 – 13:30 Lunch
2019 NanoScientific Symposium AsiaVenue: National University of Singapore
Date: 25 September 2019 | 09:00 to 17:00
This symposium is for nanoscience researchers and scientists to learn about the latest studies being formed using SPM. The event will cover applications innanomaterials and nanoelectronics, polymers and composites, magnetics, photonics, semiconductor and MEMS process and applications, analytical chemistry, biology and biomedicine.
AGENDA
Closing Remarks: Keibock Lee, Park Systems
5:45 pm – 7:00 pm
Day Two
Cocktail Reception, Park Nanoscience Center, NanoFab East, Suite 1100
Jake Rabinowitz, Colombia University
Nanoscale SICM Under Concentration Gradients
Fanny Hiebel, Harvard University
Towards the demonstration of epitaxy from supra-atomic-resolution images
Theo Borca-Tasciuc, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Quantitative Temperature Distribution Measurements by Non-Contact Scanning Thermal Microscopy Using Wollaston Probes Under Ambient Conditions
Zachary Hallenbeck, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Super-Resolution Fluorescence Lifetime Microscopy for Probing Plasmonic Emission Rate Enhancement on the Nanoscale
Fang Xu, Harvard University
Probe Dynamics At Atomic Level: In Situ Non-Uniform Reaction Rates During Oxidation of Low-Chain Alcohols on Gold
Michael Shur, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Counterintuitive Physics of Ballistic Transport in the Nanoscale State-of-the-Art Electronic Device
Wednesday, November 20, 2019 Park Nanoscience Center, NanoFab East, Suite 1100Atomic Force Microscope Hands-on Workshop & Demo
Networking Breakfast
Introduction to AFM - Auto mode, topography and nanomechanical
AFM Demo #1
Lunch
Advanced AFM Methods - Power scripting, SICM
AFM Demo #2
Hands-on Demos - Special requests, attendee sample runs, guided use of AFMs
4:15 pm
4:30 pm
4:45 pm
5:00 pm
5:15 pm
9:00 am
10:00 am
11:00 am
12:00 pm
1:00 pm
2:00 pm
3:00 pm
NANO
November 19-20, SUNY Polytechnic Institute, Albany, NY
NanoScientific Symposium US Scanning Probe Microscopy (SPM) Program
Day One Tuesday November 19, 2019NanoFab South Auditorium
5:30 pm