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Students
working in the lab gain hands on experience that will carry over
seamlessly into the workforce, whether pursuing a career
in research,
teaching or industry. Specifically, our students work on
high-vacuum
systems, atomic force microscopes, electrical characterization tools,
thin-film deposition techniques and much more. We fabricate nanowires
1000 times smaller in diameter than a human hair. We measure currents
over 1 trillion times smaller than the currents found in your toaster.
We have even been known to play around in the machine shop from time to
time, fabricating our own parts.
Our two main projects are
currently the following: (1) we are investigating the role of the
surface in the electrical properties of the wide band-gap
semiconductors ZnO and GaN; and (2) we are fabricating and
characterizing ZnO nanowires to study I-V
behavior and charge transport properties for this quantum-confined
system. We also have a few smaller projects such as the construction of
a scanning tunneling microscope that can image surfaces at the atomic
level, and incorporating our research into the physics curriculum.
To
learn more about our research, the people involved and the equipment we
have available, click on the links at the top of the page, or as
follows:
People :: Learn more about the
people involved in the lab
Research :: Learn more about
our research
Equipment :: Learn more about
the types of equipment available in our lab
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