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Katherine S. Ziemer, Ph.D. |
Wouldn't
it be cool to have crystal-clear cell phone communications with one
tenth as many towers? How about being able to toss a handful of
pebble-sized devices into the depths of the ocean and record marine
activity, sense the presence of undersea earthquakes, locate
shipwrecks, and track ships and submarines? Would you like to have a
device the size of a cherry tomato that would sit on the dashboard of
your car and detect airborne pollutants, sense unusual vibrations in
the engine, communicate with satellites for on-board directions, and
let you know when you are too close to the car in front of you? One
approach to engineering these applications is to create a next
generation of electronic devices based on multifunctional materials -
that is, create a single device that interacts with its environment
mechanically, electronically, optically, and magnetically. The
functional integration of different materials at the atomic level
presents many challenges to material scientists and engineers. But the
potential of these next-generation electronic devices is open to the
imagination. Dr. Ziemer's research involves engineering surfaces in order to integrate wide bandgap semiconductors with functional and multi-functional oxides, organic molecules, and/or biomaterials. Dr. Ziemer's group, in the Interface Engineering Laboratory, takes advantage of the ultra-high vacuum environment to study, at the atomic level, the growth and processing of thin films and nanostructures. This "surface engineering" is based on the hypothesis that understanding the atomic-level interactions at a surface will lead to developing processes to create new materials and to effectively interface different materials for new functionalities. The tools used for growth and formation mechanism studies are solid source effusion cells, plasma sources, ion sources, atom sources, and the in-situ analysis tools of reflection high-energy electron diffraction (RHEED), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS).
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