Past, Present, and Future

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Nanotechnology
Advertisements

Magnetic Data Storage A computer hard drive stores your data magnetically Disk NS direction of disk motion Write Head __ Bits of information.
Science Saturday --- October 1, Nanotechnology Exciting new science and technology for the 21st century IBM chipUMass LogoTI mirror array.
Self Assembly July 9, 2008 Summer 2008 Nanotechnology Institute.
Introduction to Nanotechnology
(and briefly, Electrodeposition)
Nanotechnology What, How, Why? MAST, October 22, 2010.
Introduction to Nanotechnology
Overview and Introduction to Nanotechnology: What, Why and How Overview and Introduction to Nanotechnology: What, Why and How Mark Tuominen Professor of.
Introduction to Nanotechnology:
STEM ED/CHM Nanotechnology 2007
Magnetic Memory: Data Storage and Nanomagnets Magnetic Memory: Data Storage and Nanomagnets Mark Tuominen Professor of Physics.
More Real-World Applications of Nanotechnology: Energy
Nanotechnology R&D impacts many industries Electronics Materials Health/Biotech Chemical Environmental Energy Aerospace Automotive Security Forest products.
10 GB GB GB GB GB 2007 Data Storage. Example: Advancement of the iPod Hard drive Magnetic data storage Uses nanotechnology!
Nanoscience, Nanotechnology and Nanomanufacturing Exciting new science and technology for the 21st century.
Electroplating to make nanostructures. Electroplating - The chemical conversion of ions in solution into a solid deposit of metal atoms with the work.
Magnets used to store data ? Magnet with unknown state Current N S S N 0 1.
Electroplating to make nanostructures
Measuring Nanostructures. How do we see nanostructures? A light microscope? Helpful, but cannot resolve below 1000 nm An electron microscope? Has a long.
Overview and Introduction to Nanotechnology: What, Why and How Overview and Introduction to Nanotechnology: What, Why and How Mark Tuominen Professor of.
Nanotechnology:Data Storage Activity and Other Topics Nanotechnology:Data Storage Activity and Other Topics Mark Tuominen Professor of Physics Science.
Magnetic Memory: Data Storage and Nanomagnets Magnetic Memory: Data Storage and Nanomagnets Mark Tuominen Professor of Physics.
Introduction to Nanotechnology: What, Why and How Introduction to Nanotechnology: What, Why and How Mark Tuominen Professor of Physics Science Saturday,
Nanotechnology What, How, Why? UMass Science Saturday, February 28, 2009.
Introduction to Nanotechnology:
Introduction to Nanotechnology:
Module A-2: SYNTHESIS & ASSEMBLY
Anodic Aluminum Oxide.
Magnetic Memory: Data Storage and Nanomagnets Magnetic Memory: Data Storage and Nanomagnets Mark Tuominen UMass Kathy Aidala Mount Holyoke College.
Nanoscale structures in Integrated Circuits By Edward Mulimba.
Hello from Mike Deal at Stanford University - Senior Research Scientist at the Stanford Nanofabrication Facility V5.15.
Nanotechnology is receiving a lot of attention of late across the globe. The term nano originates etymologically from the Greek, and it means.
-Buckley and Calm July 22, Nanotechnology Education Curriculum Development Program Doug Buckley Chair of Electrical Engineering Technology Springfield.
NANOSCALE LITHOGRAPHY MICHAEL JOHNSTON 4/13/2015.
Science and Technology of Nano Materials
materials science the hybrid science chem • physics • bio • nano
Spin Dependent Transport Properties of Magnetic Nanostructures Amédée d’Aboville, with Dr. J. Philip, Dr. S. Kang, with Dr. J. Philip, Dr. S. Kang, J.
Welcome! The 2015 Summer Institute in Nanotechnology.
Overview and Introduction to Nanotechnology: What, Why and How Overview and Introduction to Nanotechnology: What, Why and How Mark Tuominen Professor of.
CCMR – RET 2008 Week 1 June 29 to July Day 1 Monday June 29, 2008 Kevin’s “Cornell is up on a hill so it is extremely steep between the.
Nanotechnology The biggest science and engineering initiative since the Apollo program.
Techniques for Synthesis of Nano-materials
Surface Morphology Diagram for Cylinder-Forming Block Copolymer Thin Films Xiaohua Zhang Center for Soft Condensed Matter Physics and Interdisciplinary.
…a Dimensional Restriction Primer. The Nanoscale m = 1 Ångstrom m = 1 nanometer 1 billion nanometers in 1 meter 1 billion meters circle globe.
January 27, 2010 (#92) Need: Books/Notebooks.  Continue to Build a better understanding of Electric and Magnetic Field behaviors  Connection between.
Nanotechnology What, How, Why? NSTA, Indianapolis, March 30, 2012.
Nanotechnology.
Nanoscience and ICT. What do the Apollo mission spacecraft to the moon and a washing machine have in common? Same amount of computing power! Technology.
Introduction to Nanotechnology
Nanotechnology. Presented by Mr. Lundberg Test your knowledge of scale... What is the thickness of a dollar bill.. in nanometers? (the answer will be.
1 1 nanometer (nm) = 10 hydrogen atoms side-by-side Meaning of “nano”: One billionth (10x-9) Nanometer (nm) = one billionth of a.
Lithography and Electrodeposition
2-D Nanostructure Synthesis (Making THIN FILMS!)
NANOSCALE LITHOGRAPHY, TECHNIQUES AND TECHNOLOGY EE 4611 DEHUA LIU 4/8/2016.
KYLE RETZER COSC 380 Nanotechnology. Roadmap The Nanoscale. What is it? Starting point. Nanotechnology today. How is it useful?
Nanotechnologies for Electronics
Lecture 6 Fundamentals of Multiscale Fabrication
Lecture 7 Fundamentals of Multiscale Fabrication
Fabrication of Nano-porous Templates Using Molecular Self-Assembly of Block Copolymers for the Synthesis of Nanostructures Luke Soule, Jason Tresback Center.
NANOCHEMISTRY.
NANO MATERIALS Mr. Sonaji V. Gyakwad Assistant Professor
Data Storage and Nanomagnets
Top-down and Bottom-up Processes
INTRO TO TDM AND BUM TDM – Top Down Manufacturing
Data Storage and Nanomagnets
INTRO TO TDM AND BUM TDM – Top Down Manufacturing
Nanocharacterization (III)
Nanotechnology Prepared by: ASHWINI GHORPADE.
Nano Technology Dr. Raouf Mahmood. Nano Technology Dr. Raouf Mahmood.
Presentation transcript:

Past, Present, and Future Nanotechnology: Past, Present, and Future STEM ED UMass March 29, 2008

Introduction to Nanotechnology: What, Why and How bnl manchester UMass Amherst Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center

Nanotechnology: What?

1 nanometer = 1 billionth of a meter Nanotechnology Nanotechnology is the understanding and control of matter at dimensions of roughly 1 to 100 nanometers, where unique phenomena enable novel applications. 1 nanometer = 1 billionth of a meter = 1 x 10-9 m nano.gov

How small are nanostructures? Single Hair Width = 0.1 mm = 100 micrometers = 100,000 nanometers ! 1 nanometer = one billionth (10-9) meter

Smaller still DNA 3 nanometers 6,000 nanometers Hair Red blood cell .

From DOE

A Few Nanostructures Made at UMass 100 nm dots 70 nm nanowires 200 nm rings 150 nm holes 18 nm pores 12 nm pores 14 nm dots 13 nm rings 25 nm honeycomb 14 nm nanowires

"Nano" Nanoscale - at the 1-100 nm scale, roughly Nanostructure - an object that has nanoscale features Nanoscience - the properties of nanostructures and the underlying science Nanotechnology - the techniques for making and characterizing nanostructures and putting them to use Nanomanufacturing - methods for producing nanostructures in reliable and commercially viable ways

Nanotechnology: Why?

Example: Advancement of the iPod 10 GB 2001 20 GB 2002 40 GB 2004 80 GB 2006 160 GB 2007 Hard drive Magnetic data storage Uses nanotechnology!

Magnetic Data Storage A computer hard drive stores your data magnetically “Read” Head Signal “Write” Head current S N Disk N S 1 _ “Bits” of information direction of disk motion

Scaling Down to the Nanoscale Increases the amount of data stored on a fixed amount of “real estate” ! Now ~ 100 billion bits/in2, future target more than 1 trillion bits/in2 25 DVDs on a disk the size of a quarter, or all Library of Congress books on a 1 sq ft tile!

Why do we want to make things at the nanoscale? To make better and new products: smaller, cheaper, faster and more effective. (Electronics, catalysts, water purification, solar cells, coatings, medical diagnostics & therapy, etc) To introduce completely new physical phenomena to science, technology. (Quantum behavior and other effects.) (More on why later)

Nanotechnology: How? How to make nanostructures? How to characterize and test them?

Making Nanostructures: Nanofabrication Top down versus bottom up methods Lithography Deposition Etching Machining Chemical Self-Assembly

Nanostructures nanofilm, macroscale (3D) object or nanolayer (2D) height depth width nanoparticle, nanodot, quantum dot (0D) nanowire, nanorod, or nanocylinder (1D)

Nanofilms (making thin objects)

An example of a FILM: Oil on water A monolayer NANOFILM (single layer of molecules) ~1 nm thick Langmuir film This is an example of SELF-ASSEMBLY

Nanofilm by Thermal Evaporation sample QCM Vaporization or sublimation of a heated material onto a substrate in a vacuum chamber film vapor Au, Cr, Al, Ag, Cu, SiO, others Pressure must be held low to prevent contamination! vacuum ~10-7 torr source There are many other thin film manufacturing techniques resistive, e-beam, rf or laser heat source vacuum pump

Nanofilm by Electroplating V cathode anode CuSO4 dissolved in water Working Electrode (WE) Counter (CE) Cu(0) –> Cu2+ + 2e- "oxidation" If using an inert Pt electrode: 2 H2O –> O2 + 4H+ + 4e- "reduction" Cu2+ + 2e- –> Cu(0)

Imaging Nanostructures Atomic Force Microscope (AFM)

"Optical Lever" for Profilometry laser . cantilever

"Optical Lever" for Profilometry Long light path and a short cantilever gives large amplification laser . cantilever

Atomic Force Microscope AFM Cantilever Chip AFM Instrument Head Atomic Force Microscope Laser Beam Path Cantilever Deflection

STM Image of Nickel Atoms

Lithography (controlling width and depth)

Mark Tuominen Mark Tuominen Lithography Mark Tuominen Mark Tuominen (Using a stencil or mask)

Photolithography for Deposition process recipe apply spin bake spin coating substrate spin on resist resist expose mask (reticle) exposed unexposed "scission" develop narrow line deposit liftoff

Lithography Patterned Several IBM Times Copper Wiring On a Computer Chip

Electron-Beam Lithography Polymer film Silicon crystal Nanoscopic Mask !

Self-Assembled Nanostructures and Lithography Based on Self-Assembly

Self Assembly

Diatoms sinancanan.net priweb.org

Gecko feet

Abalone

NANOFABRICATION BY SELF ASSEMBLY Diblock Copolymers Block “B” Block “A” PS PMMA ~10 nm Scale set by molecular size Ordered Phases 10% A 30% A 50% A 70% A 90% A

Versatile, self-assembling, nanoscale lithographic system CORE CONCEPT FOR NANOFABRICATION Deposition Template Etching Mask Nanoporous Membrane (physical or electrochemical) Remove polymer block within cylinders (expose and develop) Versatile, self-assembling, nanoscale lithographic system

Application examples: Nanoelectronics

Computer Microprocessor "Heart of the computer" Does the "thinking"

Making Small Smaller An Example: Electronics-Microprocessors microscale nanoscale macroscale ibm.com

Electronics Keep On Getting Better Moore's "Law": Number of Transistors per Microprocessor Chip intel.com

Hard Disk Drives - a home for bits Hitachi

Magnetic Data Storage ? N S ‘0’ N S S N S N ‘1’ Current Magnet with unknown magnetic state N S S N S Current N ‘1’

Binary Representation of Data only 2 choices one bit “1” or “0” two bits 00, 01, 10, 11 4 choices three bits 000, 001, 010, 011, 100, 101, 110, 111 8 choices n bits has 2n choices For example, 5 bits has 25 = 32 choices... more than enough to represent all the letters of the alphabet

Binary representation of lower case letters 5-bit "Super Scientist" code: ex: k = 01011 1 S N OR (Coding Activity: Use attractive and repulsive forces to "read" the magnetic data!)

Improving Magnetic Data Storage Technology The UMass Amherst Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing is working to improve this technology Granular Media Perpendicular Write Head Soft Magnetic UnderLayer (SUL) coil 1 bit Y. Sonobe, et al., JMMM (2006) • CHM Goal: Make "perfect" media using self-assembled nano-templates • Also, making new designs for storage

Electrodeposited Nanowires in a Nanoporous Polymer Template (Mask) nanowires in a diblock copolymer template nanoporous template Pulse reverse electrodeposition results in improved microcrystalline structure and improved magnetic properties (larger perpendicula magnetocrystalline anisotropy) 1x1012 wires/in2

Solar Cells Benefit: Sun is an unlimited source of electronic energy. Konarka

Electric Solar Cells Sunlight - + + - Made from single-crystal silicon wafers (conventionally) Sunlight wires - cross-sectional view “load” n-type silicon Voltage p-type silicon + + - Current The load can be a lamp, an electric motor, a CD player, a toaster, etc

Nanostructured Solar Cells Sunlight - “load” Voltage + Current More interface area - More power!

Nanotechnology R&D is interdisciplinary and impacts many applications Physics Chemistry Biology Materials Science Polymer Science Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Medicine And others Electronics Materials Health/Biotech Chemical Environmental Energy Aerospace Automotive Security Forest products And others

My Advice to Students: Pursue your interests Ask questions Be clever Re: Your future My Advice to Students: Pursue your interests Ask questions Be clever Do! Thanks for visiting UMass and learning about nanotechnology!

Thanks from the UMass team! Thanks learning about nanotechnology!