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Contact Detection for Nanomanipulation in Scanning Electron MicroscopeTo, Steve 03 January 2012 (has links)
A major difficulty in the fabrication of nanostructure based electronics is the lack of effective processes capable of precisely arranging nanostructures into predefined positions. Top-down approaches introduce increased complexity and a high cost for practical industrial use, while bottom-up approaches are probabilistic in nature and do not provide precise control of nanostructure properties (i.e., number, diameter), which influence device performance. Alternatively, nanomanipulation promises specificity, precision and programmed motion and its automation may facilitate the large-scale fabrication of nanostructure based devices.
This study focuses on the development of an automated contact detection algorithm which positions an end-effector in contact with a target surface without the need for additional equipment, devices or sensors. We demonstrate this algorithm as an enabling feature for automated nano-FET biosensor construction with precise control over nanowire parameters thereby reducing device-to-device variability and also potentially allowing us to optimize individual device performance.
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Contact Detection for Nanomanipulation in Scanning Electron MicroscopeTo, Steve 03 January 2012 (has links)
A major difficulty in the fabrication of nanostructure based electronics is the lack of effective processes capable of precisely arranging nanostructures into predefined positions. Top-down approaches introduce increased complexity and a high cost for practical industrial use, while bottom-up approaches are probabilistic in nature and do not provide precise control of nanostructure properties (i.e., number, diameter), which influence device performance. Alternatively, nanomanipulation promises specificity, precision and programmed motion and its automation may facilitate the large-scale fabrication of nanostructure based devices.
This study focuses on the development of an automated contact detection algorithm which positions an end-effector in contact with a target surface without the need for additional equipment, devices or sensors. We demonstrate this algorithm as an enabling feature for automated nano-FET biosensor construction with precise control over nanowire parameters thereby reducing device-to-device variability and also potentially allowing us to optimize individual device performance.
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