SURFACE NANOSCIENCE Prof. Lorenzo S. Caputi Surface Nanoscience Group

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is graphene? In late 2004, graphene was discovered by Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov (Univ. of Manchester) Nobel Prize in Physics Q1. How.
Advertisements

Topical lecture: Quantum Size Effects in Nanostructures A. Tavkhelidze Ilia State University.
Epitaxial Graphene: a New Platform for Carbon Electronics Materials Development State of the Art Education and Diversity The GT MRSEC has been developing.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley PowerPoint ® Lectures for University Physics, Twelfth Edition – Hugh D. Young.
Composite Materials A novel interesting field Rui Zhang
Introduction to Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy
Institute of Optics, University of Rochester1 Carbon Nanotubes: theory and applications Yijing Fu 1, Qing Yu 2 1 Institute of Optics, University of Rochester.
Quantum Dots. Optical and Photoelectrical properties of QD of III-V Compounds. Alexander Senichev Physics Faculty Department of Solid State Physics
Department of Electronics Nanoelectronics 10 Atsufumi Hirohata 10:00 Tuesday, 17/February/2015 (B/B 103)
Composition and thickness dependence of secondary electron yield for MCP detector materials Slade J. Jokela, Igor V. Veryovkin, Alexander V. Zinovev, Jeffrey.
Philip Kim Department of Physics Columbia University Toward Carbon Based Electronics Beyond CMOS Devices.
Introducing concepts of nanoscience and nanotechnology for engineering education Sandra M. Mendoza Universidad Tecnológica Nacional – Facultad Regional.
by M. S. Dresselhaus, A. Jorio, A. G. Souza Filho, and R. Saito
Methods in Surface Physics Experimentation in Ultra-High Vacuum Environments Hasan Khan (University of Rochester), Dr. Meng-Fan Luo (National Central University)
Tobe Laboratory Kyohei Kaneko. Introduction ・ Concept of 2D Polymer ・ Graphene ・ Chemical Reaction on The Surface Observation Conditions of STM ・ Liquid/Solid.
1 The nanoscale ‘Nano’ is the unit prefix representing 10 –9. Some common unit prefixes.
Epitaxial graphene Claire Berger GATECH- School of Physics, Atlanta CNRS-Institut Néel, Grenoble NIRT Nanopatterned Epitaxial graphite.
Graphene – Optical Properties Michael Tsang UC Berkeley Physics 141A Spring 2013 Lawrence Berkeley Lab Manchester Group for monolayers.
INTRODUCTION Characteristics of Thermal Radiation Thermal Radiation Spectrum Two Points of View Two Distinctive Modes of Radiation Physical Mechanism of.
Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) Atomic force microscopy (AFM) Scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) UV & visible spectroscopy Transmission experiments.
Techniques for Synthesis of Nano-materials
EEW508 Structure of Surfaces Surface structure Rice terrace.
National Science Foundation Goal: Development of new catalysts, anode and cathode materials is critical for advancing fuel cell technology. An alternative.
Reminders for this week Homework #4 Due Wednesday (5/20) Lithography Lab Due Thursday (5/21) Quiz #3 on Thursday (5/21) – In Classroom –Covers Lithography,
Studies of the Properties of Polymer Nanocomposites Mechanical Properties  Tensile Measurements  Dynamic Mechanical Analysis (DMA) Morphology  Scanning.
NANO 225 Intro to Nano/Microfabrication
Graphene - Electric Properties
Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy (EELS) Suggested Reading: Used electron spectrometer Used TEM Review of theory for elastic + inelastic scattering Examples.
FNI 2A Tools1 Tools of Nanoscience Microscopy  Optical  Electron SEM TEM  Scanning Probe STM AFM NSOM Spectroscopy  Electromagnetic  Mass  Electron.
CAREER: Synthesis and Electronic/Electrical Properties of Carbon Nanotube Junctions Wenzhi LiFlorida International UniversityDMR One of the objectives.
S. A. Giamini. Graphene A hexagonal honeycomb lattice of carbon. In its basic form it is a one-atom thick (2D) sheet. Interesting properties: Better electric.
The many forms of carbon Carbon is not only the basis of life, it also provides an enormous variety of structures for nanotechnology. This versatility.
A. Orozco, E. Kwan, A. Dhirani Department of Chemistry, University of Toronto SCANNING TUNNELING MICROSCOPY: A NEW CHM 326 LAB.
What is Graphene?  It is made of a single layer of carbon atoms that are bonded together in a repeating pattern of hexagons  It is one million times.
Carbon Allotropes Fullerenes Carbon nanotubes Graphene Diamond.
Carbon Allotropes And Its Nanostructures
Thermal Conduction in Metals and Alloys Classical Approach From the kinetic theory of gases ) where, l is mean free path.
Two-dimensional (2D) materials have attracted the attention of many researchers. The first created 2D material was graphene, it was discovered in the early.
Raman spectroscopy.
The impact of nanoscience on heterogeneous catalysis  Alexis T. Bell  From Science 2003,299,  Impact factor=27 Viewpoint.
IC T IC-1/35 Lecture Characterzation of Catalysts Investigate: Structure/morphology Surface area Number of active sites Pore distributions.
1.Please describe two template-based fabrication strategies for highly ordered nanostructures! 2.How can core-shell nanostructures be synthesized? 3.Which.
Lingva Technical English Projects Graphene
Carbon.
CARBON NANOSTRUCTURES (FULLERENES, CARBON NANOTUBES, GRAPHENE)
Materials Science at a Glance
Atomic Resolution Imaging
Ching-Rong “Ada” Chung Mentor: Dr. Jing Zhou Department of Chemistry
Solids: Conductors, Insulators and Semiconductors
GRAPHENe. Introduction  Graphene can be described as a one-atom thick layer of graphite.  It is the basic structural element of other allotropes, including.
THE EFFECT OF SPIN COATING RATE ON MICROSTRUCTURES OF CUPROUS OXIDE THIN FILM PREPARED BY SOL-GEL TECHNIQUE DEWI SURIYANI BT CHE HALIN School of Material.
Riphah International University, Lahore
Derivatization of Carbon Nanotubes by the ZnO and ZnS nanoparticles
Quantum Size Effects in Nanostructures
CNR-Istituto del Sistemi Complessi, Roma
Department of Electronics
X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy of MgO on Graphene
Jared Johnson & Jason Peltier
DIAMOND There are NO MOLECULES This is a GIANT COVALENT NETWORK
Chemistry Division of CIEMAT
Graphene doping with single atoms – a theoretical survey of energy surface  Elad Segev and Amir Natan* Department of Physical Electronics , Electrical.
Characterizing Multilayer Thin films
Introduction - characterization of materials.
AQA BONDING, STRUCTURE AND THE PROPERTIES OF MATTER 2
Identifying the Driving Forces for Alloying in Ultra-Thin Films
Determining Composition through X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy
Carbon Nanomaterials and Technology
Sensitivity curves beyond the Advanced detectors
C.6 Liquid Crystals The liquid crystal state Liquid Crystal Examples
Surface analysis techniques part I
Presentation transcript:

SURFACE NANOSCIENCE Prof. Lorenzo S. Caputi Surface Nanoscience Group Department of Physics, University of Calabria

Ultra-high vacuum equipments UHV Laboratory Materials Laboratory

Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM)

Low Energy Electron Diffraction Nanoscienza di Superficie - UHV Low Energy Electron Diffraction X/ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy Auger Electron Spectroscopy

Main Electron Spectroscopies AES, XPS -> surface composition UPS -> electronic structure LEED -> long range surface order EELS, HREELS -> collective electronic properties (plasmons), vibrational properties (phonons, molecular vibrational modes)

Main Scientific Interests Surface properties of materials Catalysts Oxides Synthesis and study of nanomaterials Carbon nanotubes Epitaxial Graphene (bottom-up) Graphene oxide (top-down)

Why Graphene?

CARBON GRAPHITE DIAMOND 2004: GRAPHENE Physics Nobel Price in 2010 1985: fullerens Chemistry Nobel Prize in 1996 1991: Carbon Nanotubes

GRAPHENE 2010: around 3000 papers around 400 patents

Graphene: basic constituent of fullerens, nanotubes and graphite.

Graphene: tridimensional band structure Dirac cones Graphene: tridimensional band structure

Linearity of the dispersion curve at Dirac points Electrons behave as Dirac fermions without mass At low energies, electrons in graphene have a Fermi-Dirac speed of about c/300

Peculiarities of graphene The thinnest material. Highest surface/mass ratio (2600 m2/g). Strongest material (Young modulus 1.0 TPa). Highest current density at room temperature (about 103 times with respect to copper). Highest thermal conductivity (5.3x103 WmK-1). Impermeable to gases. Highest electron mean free path at room temperature (300-500 nm). Highly transparent (absorbs about 2% in the visible).

Graphene production bottom-up top-down

Graphite oxidation in collaboration with ITM-CNR

Graphite oxidation in collaboration with ITM-CNR

Electron Spectroscopy applied to Graphene Oxide 5.8 eV p-plasmon Reflection EELS Intensity (arb. units) 5.0 eV Transmission EELS on single-layer GO Energy loss (eV)

Thank you for your attention