PITTSBURGH --The
University of Pittsburgh recently became the only
institution in the United States and only the second
in the world to have a unique nanofabrication capability.
Eight researchers in Pitt's Institute of NanoScience
and Engineering (INSE) have just completed a week
of training on the new Raith electron beam Lithography
and Nano Engineering (eLiNE) workstation.
The eLiNE system allows researchers to create nanometer-scale structures using
an electron beam that is focused to less than two nanometers. A unique feature
of this instrument is an electron beam-induced deposition and etching capability
that allows metals, insulators, and semiconductors to be added or removed, using
the electrons as a nanocatalyst. This new capability only recently has become
commercially available.
Pitt students and faculty from various disciplines, including electrical engineering,
biomedical engineering, physics, and chemistry, are scheduled for training.
"In a sense, it's like having a machine shop, only a million times smaller," said
Jeremy Levy, Pitt professor of physics and astronomy and the faculty member in
charge of training new users and maintaining the instrument.
"What is exciting is that researchers have come to the initial training session
with some precursory ideas about what they want to do, but after seeing all of
the capabilities, their outlooks change; completely new approaches now seem possible," Levy
added.
The eLiNE system is the first of three major pieces of instrumentation available
at INSE. The other two instruments, a focused ion beam system and a transmission
electron microscope, are scheduled for delivery in early 2006.
The INSE is an integrated, multidisciplinary organization that brings coherence
to the University's research efforts and resources in the fields of nanoscale
science and engineering
Contact: Karen Hoffmann
[412-624-4356; klh52@pitt.edu]
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