Cumings Group Invents New Microscopy Technique
Department of Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) Assistant Professor John Cumings and his research group, including postdoctoral research associate Todd Brintlinger, graduate students Yi Qi (MSE) and Kamal Baloch (Chemical Physics), and colleague David Goldhaber-Gordon (Stanford University), have published their development of a new electron microscopy technique in a recent issue of Nano Letters,1 a leading journal for nanoscale research. Dubbed electron thermal microscopy (ETM), the technique is used for nanoscale thermometry (measuring a system's temperature or ability to transfer heat) by imaging liquid/solid transitions in small metal islands. This allows scientists to test nanoscale devices in real-time while they are observed in a transmission electron microscope.
Often, Cumings explains, a nanoscale device or material is tested outside of the microscope, then put through an imaging process, creating "wait-time" and preventing researchers from receiving immediate feedback on their work. Cumings, however, envisions "a new future for the electron microscope as a fully-functional nano-laboratory." One of the ways he and his group are accomplishing this is through the use of the Nanoscale Imaging, Sprectroscopy and Properties (NISP) Lab's JEM 2100 LaB6 transmission electron microscope (TEM), coupled with video-rate imaging and special sample holders they have designed and constructed.
Devices for their experiments are fabricated in the FabLab, which, like the NISPLab, is part of the Maryland NanoCenter. The Cumings group starts with an electron transparent silicon nitride membrane only 100nm thick. "Islands" made out of indium (a metal similar to aluminum and zinc used in electronics) are then grown on the backside of membranes. The metal islands form an array of individual, binary thermometers, each reporting their local temperature as either above or below the melting temperature, 156.6°C. The Cumings group has demonstrated the technique using fabricated nanoscale heater wires. Different electrical currents conducted through the wires are used to generate heat, which in turn melts the islands. The melted islands comprise 'thermal maps' of the region. The resulting nanoscale maps agree with the group's theoretical models of temperature distribution, proving the utility of the technique.
The ETM technique—one of the fastest, highest resolution, and most reliable for thermometry at this scale—will in the future be used to thermally characterize unknown nanosystems. This can be done through passive heating, in which heater wires are used to generate heat while unknown nanomaterials distort the temperature maps; or through active heating, in which the nanosystems themselves produce local heating when a voltage is applied to them. Active heating is extremely useful because both electrical and thermal conduction can be measured at the same time, while passive heating allows for electrical insulators to be measured. The technique is currently being used for thermal characterization of multi-walled carbon nanotubes.
For More Information:
1Brintlinger, T.; Qi, Y.; Baloch, K. H.; Goldhaber-Gordon, D.; Cumings, J. Electron Thermal Microscopy. Nano Lett.; (Letter); 2008; 8(2); 582-585. Abstract | Full Article (HTML)
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