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Advances in Spectroscopy and Imaging of Surfaces and Nanostructures: Symposium held November 29–December 3, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.

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Advances in Spectroscopy and Imaging of Surfaces and Nanostructures: Symposium held November 29–December 3, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. / Cumins, John (Editor); Fong, Dilon (Editor); Huang, Jianyu (Editor) et al.
New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011. 220 p. (Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings; Vol. 1318).

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsProceedings

Harvard

Cumins, J, Fong, D, Huang, J, Lindsay, S, Zhou, G, Guo, J, Bluhm, H, Haveker, M, Yamaguchi, S, Koster, G, Granozio, F, Eres, G, Eom, C-B, Ingle, N, Kolosov, O, Huey, BD, Hong, S & Shin, H (eds) 2011, Advances in Spectroscopy and Imaging of Surfaces and Nanostructures: Symposium held November 29–December 3, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings, vol. 1318, Cambridge University Press, New York. <http://assets.cambridge.org/97816051/12954/frontmatter/9781605112954_frontmatter.pdf>

APA

Cumins, J., Fong, D., Huang, J., Lindsay, S., Zhou, G., Guo, J., Bluhm, H., Haveker, M., Yamaguchi, S., Koster, G., Granozio, F., Eres, G., Eom, C-B., Ingle, N., Kolosov, O., Huey, B. D., Hong, S., & Shin, H. (Eds.) (2011). Advances in Spectroscopy and Imaging of Surfaces and Nanostructures: Symposium held November 29–December 3, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. (Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings; Vol. 1318). Cambridge University Press. http://assets.cambridge.org/97816051/12954/frontmatter/9781605112954_frontmatter.pdf

Vancouver

Cumins J, (ed.), Fong D, (ed.), Huang J, (ed.), Lindsay S, (ed.), Zhou G, (ed.), Guo J, (ed.) et al. Advances in Spectroscopy and Imaging of Surfaces and Nanostructures: Symposium held November 29–December 3, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011. 220 p. (Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings).

Author

Cumins, John (Editor) ; Fong, Dilon (Editor) ; Huang, Jianyu (Editor) et al. / Advances in Spectroscopy and Imaging of Surfaces and Nanostructures : Symposium held November 29–December 3, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. New York : Cambridge University Press, 2011. 220 p. (Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings).

Bibtex

@book{309a8d9f8866419db5bec7a29ad7ea98,
title = "Advances in Spectroscopy and Imaging of Surfaces and Nanostructures: Symposium held November 29–December 3, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.",
abstract = "There are, perhaps, three components that are vital to the success of any scientific quest. They are 1) creative thinking and courageous experimentation of researchers in the field, 2) an amalgamation of this research with approaches of the broader research community (which often creates the most exciting ideas), and, finally, 3) practical applications of the research that put it in the broader perspective of our lives. All of these components are distinctive features of four symposia that were held at the Fall MRS 2010 meeting in Boston and are brought together in this volume, namely, Symposium SS: “Advanced Imaging and Scattering Techniques for In Situ Studies”, TT: {"}In Situ X-Ray Synchrotron Radiation Spectroscopies in Energy-Related Materials Science and Heterogeneous Catalysis”, UU: “Real-Time Studies of Evolving Thin Films and Interfaces” and VV: “Novel Development and Applications of Scanning Probe Microscopy.” A major unifying theme for these symposia is exploration of intricate properties of materials on the near-to-atomic length scale in the immediate vicinity of the free surface or at interfaces between materials. These symposia focus on various aspects and approaches of exploration of surfaces and interfaces from more traditional electron and x-ray scattering (the focus of symposia SS, TT, and UU) to more recent and rapidly advancing scanning probe microscopy, or SPM (Symposium VV). Together, they cover a field of great importance across the broad MRS community. Of tremendous interest in modern material science, this key aspect of nanotechnology considers how interfaces and surfaces help to determine properties and functionalities of a wide range of materials, including oxides, metals and nanoparticles. Monitoring evolving surfaces in real time is a prerequisite for mastering the evolution process itself. Furthermore, surfaces and interfaces often display surprising properties that are qualitatively different from those of the corresponding bulk materials. Controlling and tailoring the physical properties at the interfaces between different materials on the atomic scale can therefore result in real scientific breakthroughs. Research in atomic control when fabricating interfaces and surfaces will help in understanding important structure-property relationships as well as in improving the design of nano-devices. Another aspect of this research is developing techniques to probe the structure and/or the properties of evolving surfaces and interfaces in environments where they are created and used. Symposium UU was a forum for researchers who use or develop in-situ characterization and monitoring techniques for thin films, surfaces and interfaces. Experts in the fields of real-time 1) scattering (e.g., XRD and TEM), 2) imaging (e.g., SPM) and 3) spectroscopy (e.g., XPS) came together to report on their respective progress and/or new developments. Different kinds of probes, such as light in a wide energy spectrum, electrons and scanning probes, and their various capabilities to adapt, case by case, to the very peculiar working conditions required for this research emerged. Also, a particular opportunity was given for researchers to show prospects for applications of novel techniques to real-time analysis.",
editor = "John Cumins and Dilon Fong and Jianyu Huang and Stuart Lindsay and Guangwen Zhou and Jinghua Guo and Hedrik Bluhm and Michael Haveker and Shu Yamaguchi and Gertjan Koster and Fabio Granozio and Gyula Eres and Chang-Beom Eom and Nicholas Ingle and Oleg Kolosov and Huey, {B D} and Seungbum Hong and Hyunjung Shin",
year = "2011",
month = nov,
language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-605-11295-4",
series = "Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Advances in Spectroscopy and Imaging of Surfaces and Nanostructures

T2 - Symposium held November 29–December 3, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.

A2 - Cumins, John

A2 - Fong, Dilon

A2 - Huang, Jianyu

A2 - Lindsay, Stuart

A2 - Zhou, Guangwen

A2 - Guo, Jinghua

A2 - Bluhm, Hedrik

A2 - Haveker, Michael

A2 - Yamaguchi, Shu

A2 - Koster, Gertjan

A2 - Granozio, Fabio

A2 - Eres, Gyula

A2 - Eom, Chang-Beom

A2 - Ingle, Nicholas

A2 - Kolosov, Oleg

A2 - Huey, B D

A2 - Hong, Seungbum

A2 - Shin, Hyunjung

PY - 2011/11

Y1 - 2011/11

N2 - There are, perhaps, three components that are vital to the success of any scientific quest. They are 1) creative thinking and courageous experimentation of researchers in the field, 2) an amalgamation of this research with approaches of the broader research community (which often creates the most exciting ideas), and, finally, 3) practical applications of the research that put it in the broader perspective of our lives. All of these components are distinctive features of four symposia that were held at the Fall MRS 2010 meeting in Boston and are brought together in this volume, namely, Symposium SS: “Advanced Imaging and Scattering Techniques for In Situ Studies”, TT: "In Situ X-Ray Synchrotron Radiation Spectroscopies in Energy-Related Materials Science and Heterogeneous Catalysis”, UU: “Real-Time Studies of Evolving Thin Films and Interfaces” and VV: “Novel Development and Applications of Scanning Probe Microscopy.” A major unifying theme for these symposia is exploration of intricate properties of materials on the near-to-atomic length scale in the immediate vicinity of the free surface or at interfaces between materials. These symposia focus on various aspects and approaches of exploration of surfaces and interfaces from more traditional electron and x-ray scattering (the focus of symposia SS, TT, and UU) to more recent and rapidly advancing scanning probe microscopy, or SPM (Symposium VV). Together, they cover a field of great importance across the broad MRS community. Of tremendous interest in modern material science, this key aspect of nanotechnology considers how interfaces and surfaces help to determine properties and functionalities of a wide range of materials, including oxides, metals and nanoparticles. Monitoring evolving surfaces in real time is a prerequisite for mastering the evolution process itself. Furthermore, surfaces and interfaces often display surprising properties that are qualitatively different from those of the corresponding bulk materials. Controlling and tailoring the physical properties at the interfaces between different materials on the atomic scale can therefore result in real scientific breakthroughs. Research in atomic control when fabricating interfaces and surfaces will help in understanding important structure-property relationships as well as in improving the design of nano-devices. Another aspect of this research is developing techniques to probe the structure and/or the properties of evolving surfaces and interfaces in environments where they are created and used. Symposium UU was a forum for researchers who use or develop in-situ characterization and monitoring techniques for thin films, surfaces and interfaces. Experts in the fields of real-time 1) scattering (e.g., XRD and TEM), 2) imaging (e.g., SPM) and 3) spectroscopy (e.g., XPS) came together to report on their respective progress and/or new developments. Different kinds of probes, such as light in a wide energy spectrum, electrons and scanning probes, and their various capabilities to adapt, case by case, to the very peculiar working conditions required for this research emerged. Also, a particular opportunity was given for researchers to show prospects for applications of novel techniques to real-time analysis.

AB - There are, perhaps, three components that are vital to the success of any scientific quest. They are 1) creative thinking and courageous experimentation of researchers in the field, 2) an amalgamation of this research with approaches of the broader research community (which often creates the most exciting ideas), and, finally, 3) practical applications of the research that put it in the broader perspective of our lives. All of these components are distinctive features of four symposia that were held at the Fall MRS 2010 meeting in Boston and are brought together in this volume, namely, Symposium SS: “Advanced Imaging and Scattering Techniques for In Situ Studies”, TT: "In Situ X-Ray Synchrotron Radiation Spectroscopies in Energy-Related Materials Science and Heterogeneous Catalysis”, UU: “Real-Time Studies of Evolving Thin Films and Interfaces” and VV: “Novel Development and Applications of Scanning Probe Microscopy.” A major unifying theme for these symposia is exploration of intricate properties of materials on the near-to-atomic length scale in the immediate vicinity of the free surface or at interfaces between materials. These symposia focus on various aspects and approaches of exploration of surfaces and interfaces from more traditional electron and x-ray scattering (the focus of symposia SS, TT, and UU) to more recent and rapidly advancing scanning probe microscopy, or SPM (Symposium VV). Together, they cover a field of great importance across the broad MRS community. Of tremendous interest in modern material science, this key aspect of nanotechnology considers how interfaces and surfaces help to determine properties and functionalities of a wide range of materials, including oxides, metals and nanoparticles. Monitoring evolving surfaces in real time is a prerequisite for mastering the evolution process itself. Furthermore, surfaces and interfaces often display surprising properties that are qualitatively different from those of the corresponding bulk materials. Controlling and tailoring the physical properties at the interfaces between different materials on the atomic scale can therefore result in real scientific breakthroughs. Research in atomic control when fabricating interfaces and surfaces will help in understanding important structure-property relationships as well as in improving the design of nano-devices. Another aspect of this research is developing techniques to probe the structure and/or the properties of evolving surfaces and interfaces in environments where they are created and used. Symposium UU was a forum for researchers who use or develop in-situ characterization and monitoring techniques for thin films, surfaces and interfaces. Experts in the fields of real-time 1) scattering (e.g., XRD and TEM), 2) imaging (e.g., SPM) and 3) spectroscopy (e.g., XPS) came together to report on their respective progress and/or new developments. Different kinds of probes, such as light in a wide energy spectrum, electrons and scanning probes, and their various capabilities to adapt, case by case, to the very peculiar working conditions required for this research emerged. Also, a particular opportunity was given for researchers to show prospects for applications of novel techniques to real-time analysis.

M3 - Proceedings

SN - 978-1-605-11295-4

T3 - Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings

BT - Advances in Spectroscopy and Imaging of Surfaces and Nanostructures

PB - Cambridge University Press

CY - New York

ER -