Nanotechnology Research - Universities

 

Showing results 201 - 210 of 531 of university labs in USA:

 
A major nanoprobe laboratory with a focus on bio/nanotechnology and biomimetics was organized in July 1991 with the initial financial support from the state of Ohio and The Ohio State University. More than 5700 square feet of laboratory space was made available for this purpose. The laboratory is populated with the modern scientific equipment needed to conduct state-of-the-art research.
ENCOMM NanoSystems Laboratory is operated by the OSU Center for Electronic and Magnetic Nanoscale Composite Multifunctional Materials. Its goal is to provide academic and industrial users with access to advanced material characterization and fabrication tools for research and development applications.
The center facility for nanotech research at Ohio State.
The Lau Group at Ohio State studies quantum materials, phenomena, and devices, with interests spanning nanoscale systems, moiré materials, and emerging quantum technologies.
Nanoscale research at Ohio University's Department of Physics.
The central theme of the group's research program is the development and application of cutting-edge bio- and nano- technologies and ultrasensitive analytical methodologies to address fundamental and practical questions in chemical, biochemical and biomedical research.
An NSF Materials Innovation Platform at Cornell for designing and creating new interface and quantum materials by design, with user facilities for molecular-beam epitaxy thin-film growth, electron microscopy and theory.
The 2DCC-MIP is a national user facility, supported by the National Science Foundation, that is focused on the development of two dimensional (2D) chalcogenides for applications in next generation electronics beyond silicon for digital circuits and flexible electronics. These materials include 2D transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) films that are only a few atoms thick, topological insulator (TI) bismuth chalcogenide films that only conduct on the 2D surface, and multilayers of dissimilar chalcogenide films whose properties are dominated by 2D interfaces.
The Center for Atomically Thin Multifunctional Coatings (ATOMIC) is an NSF-supported center developing novel coating technologies and functionalities enabled by two-dimensional materials.
PennState's Center for Nanoscale Science was established as an NSF Materials Research Science and Engineering Center to carry out interdiciplinary and eductaional outreach in the areas of Molecular nanofabrication, Biomolecular Motors, and Collective Phenomena in Restricted Geometries
 
6d piezo alignement system