Nathan, Stacey, and Brianna receive UROP awards

Congratulations to Nathan Swena, Stacey Murguia, and Brianna Potter for receiving UROP awards!

Nathan Swena, Stacey Murguia, and Brianna Potter receive UROP (Undergraduate Research Opportunity) awards in Fall, 2016 to work on the following projects: 1. Nathan Swena: Background-free IR Spectroscopy Using Apertureless Scanning Near-field Microscopy The ability to perform infrared (IR) spectroscopy on the nanoscale is very important for analyzing and identifying many different material characteristics. IR spectroscopy detects the absorption of IR light by molecular resonances at specific frequencies that depend on the number of bonds, types of bonds and which atoms are bonding. Furthermore, nearly all inorganic and organic compounds have an optical response or “fingerprint” in the mid-IR range. But the ability to perform this is on a small scale is limited by conventional means due to the Abbe diffraction limit (d=λ2nsinθ)[1] which shows that the spatial resolution can only be approximately half of the wavelength. This is a large limitation for mid-IR optical methods, since mid-IR wavelengths range from 2 μm to 20 μm. This would make the best possible spatial resolution limited to about 1 μm, which is not a high enough spatial resolution to be able to see samples in the nanoscale regime. In our experiment we break through this limit by using the scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscope (s-SNOM) which is an advanced optical system based on an atomic force microscope (AFM). Using the tip-scattered light that originates from a highly confined point, the diffraction limit no longer applies and instead the resolution is limited to the radius of the AFM tip. But a difficulty with s-SNOM is the background signal that is not being scattered from the sharp tip. A background-free signal can be accomplished with the use of pseudoheterodyne technique for s-SNOM. Additionally, a new optical technique based on the s-SNOM experimental setup called photo-induced force microscopy (PiFM) has potential to provide background-free optical detection in the mid-IR range. The goal of this research is to achieve nanoscale background-free IR spectroscopy with both pseudoheterodyne and PiFM to study the optical properties of materials without background artifacts. 2. Stacey Murguia: Femto-Newton Thermal Force Measurement Using Shear Force Atomic Force Microscopy
The main goal of this research is to use shear force atomic force microscopy (SF-AFM) based on a quartz tuning fork (QTF) resonator to measure the temperature dependence of frictional forces between a tip and substrate to determine specific information about a material’s thermal properties. Nanothermometers/nanoheaters will accompany the measurement of local temperature changes and be used as a local heat source, where the localized heating will ensure that measured temperature effects are not due to bulk heating of the QTF resonator. With the success of this research, SF-AFM will provide new knowledge of nanoscale temperature distributions and materials thermal properties where sub-continuum effects may exist.
3. Brianna Potter: Near-Field Scanning Microscopy for Nanoscale Graphene Thickness (in collaboration with Prof. Jiyoung Chang) This research is aimed at using photocurrent measurements using Atomic Force Microscopy to determine how the number of layers of graphene in a sample of graphene affects its electronic properties. The process will involve optimizing the growth of both single- and multi-layered graphene. After this, the photocurrent measurements will be made by focusing near-field light on the metallic tip in the AFM. All this will help determine if there is a correlation between the number of layers of graphene and the photocurrent that is measured.

Park receives $300K NSF Grant

Congratulations to Prof. Kay Park!  He recently received a National Science Foundation grant for $299,998 on “Fundamental Studies of Near-field Enhancement in Thermionic Energy Conversion”. In 2014, Unites States consumed more than 97 quadrillion Btu of energy. This is equivalent to the amount of energy in 3.5 billion tons of coal or 776 billion gallons (US) of gasoline. However, almost 59% of such energy consumption is being lost as waste heat. It is thus imperative to find an innovative way of recycling energy from a waste heat source as an emission-free and less-costly energy resource. The objective of this project is to explore the near-field enhancement of thermionic emission for renewable energy recycling. Conventional thermionic energy conversion (TEC) generally requires a high cathode temperature over 1500K to thermally excite enough electrons from the cathode overcoming its binding potential, or work function, for power generation. Low efficiency is another challenging issue of TEC power generation. Park’s group will address this challenge by implementing a low bandgap semiconducting material as a cathode and placing it a subwavelength distance away from a thermal emitter. They hypothesize that the near-field enhancement of thermal radiation will boost the photoexcitation of electrons in the low-bandgap semiconductor cathode, significantly increasing the thermionic current density. In addition, the energy conversion efficiency will be substantially improved because the most radiation absorbed in the cathode will benefit thermionic emission, i.e., photoexcitation from the photon energy slightly above the cathode bandgap and thermalization from the excess photon energy and sub-bandgap photon energy. The success of this project will make a transformative impact to thermionic power generation as a possible way of renewable energy recycling. The project will also promote training and learning by involving students in micro/nanofabrication, thermal and infrared characterization of nanodevices, nanoscale heat transfer measurements, and nanoscale instrumentations.

Park and Francoeur receive $350K NSF Grant

Professors Mathieu Francoeur and Kay Park received a three-year NSF grant of $350,000 for their research on “Extreme Near-Field Thermal Radiation at Sub-10-nm Vacuum Gap Distances.” The objective of the research is to experimentally and theoretically investigate extreme near-field thermal radiation by: (1) measuring extreme near-field radiative heat transport between a heated tip and a surface in an ultrahigh vacuum atomic force microscope; (2) measuring the near-field thermal spectrum via tip-enhanced photocurrent generation and tip-scattered thermal radiation; and (3) modeling tip-surface near-field thermal interactions via numerically exact and approximate methods. The outcome of this research will provide knowledge on the spectral distribution of thermal radiative energy and its transport in the extreme near-field regime, and will spark the development of detection, imaging, and spectroscopy of mid-infrared light at the nanoscale as well as near-field thermophotovoltaic power generators.