UC
Davis researchers in nanotechnology, chemistry and
biology now have access to one of the most advanced
microscopes of its type in the world. The new Spectral
Imaging Facility, opened this fall, is a combination of an atomic force microscope
and a laser scanning confocal microscope, the first commercial machine of its
kind.
The atomic force microscope was built by Asylum
Research of Santa Barbara and the confocal microscope
system by Olympus America Inc. Integration of the
two systems was carried out by Asylum Research with
the participation of scientists led by Gang-yu Liu,
professor of chemistry at UC Davis. Acquisition of
the instrument was funded by a grant of $354,000
from the National Science Foundation, matched by
$151,714 from UC Davis.
The confocal microscope allows three-dimensional
imaging of samples, such as cells, and picks up structures
tagged with fluorescent dyes. Instead of cutting
a sample into thin slices, a researcher can focus
through the entire sample and resolve it in three
dimensions.
The
atomic force microscope uses an extremely fine
tip to run over the surface of a sample and "see" extremely
fine detail down to an atomic scale.
"It allows you to see both the detail and the bulk," Liu
said.
For example, biologists could use fluorescent tags
to look at structures inside a cell and link them
to very small changes on the cell membrane. Materials
scientists could use it to get information about
the bulk structure of a material and to measure the
arrangement of atoms at the surface. The tip of the
atomic force microscope can also be used as a probe
to nudge cells, or place atoms or molecules into
new, microscopic patterns.
The project includes 24 UC Davis faculty from the
departments of Chemistry and of Physics; the colleges
of Engineering, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences,
and Biological Sciences; the School of Medicine;
and from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
Media contact(s):
• Gang-yu Liu, Chemistry, (530) 754-9678, gyliu@ucdavis.edu
• Andy Fell, UC Davis News Service, (530) 752-4533, ahfell@ucdavis.edu
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