"Mind the Gap" Between Atomically Thin Materials

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Newswise In subway stations around London, the warning to Mind the Gap helps commuters keep from stepping into empty space as they leave the train. When it comes to engineering single-layer atomic structures, minding the gap will help researchers create artificial electronic materials one atomic layer at a time.

The gap is a miniscule vacuum that can only be seen under a high-power transmission electron microscope. The gap, researchers in Penn States Center for 2-Dimensional and Layered Materials (2DLM) believe, is an energy barrier that keeps electrons from easily crossing from one layer of material to the next.

Its a natural insulating layer Mother Nature built into these artificially created materials, said Joshua Robinson, assistant professor of materials science and engineering and associate director of the 2DLM Center. Were still trying to understand how electrons move vertically through these layered materials, and we thought it should take a lot less energy. Thanks to a combination of theory and experiment, we now know we have to account for this gap when we design new materials.

For the first time, the Penn State researchers grew a single atomic layer of tungsten diselenide on a one- atom-thick substrate of graphene with pristine interfaces between the two layers. When they tried to put a voltage from the top tungsten diselenide (WSe2) layer down to the graphene layer, they encountered a surprising amount of resistance. About half of the resistance was caused by the gap, which introduced a large barrier, about 1 electron volt (1eV), to the electrons trying to move between layers. This energy barrier could prove useful in designing next generation electronic devices, such as vertical tunneling field effect transistors, Robinson said.

The interest in these van der Waals materials arose with the discovery of methods to make single layer graphite by using Scotch tape to mechanically cleave a one-atom-thick layer of carbon called graphene from bulk graphite. The van der Waals force that binds layers of graphite together is weak enough to allow stripping of the single atomic layer. The Penn State researchers use a different, more scalable method, called chemical vapor deposition, to deposit a single layer of crystalline WSe2 on top of a few layers of epitaxial graphene that is grown from silicon carbide. Although graphene research exploded in the last decade, there are many van der Waal solids that can be combined to create entirely new artificial materials with unimaginable properties.

In a paper published online this month in Nano Letters, the Penn State team and colleagues from UT Dallas, the Naval Research Laboratory, Sandia National Lab, and labs in Taiwan and Saudi Arabia, discovered that the tungsten diselenide layer grew in perfectly aligned triangular islands 1-3 microns in size that slowly coalesced into a single crystal up to 1 centimeter square. Robinson believes it will be possible to grow these crystals to industrially useful wafer-scale sizes, although will require a larger furnace than he currently has in his lab.

One of the really interesting things about this gap, Robinson said, is that it allows us to grow aligned layers despite the fact that the atoms in the graphene are not lined up with the atoms in the tungsten diselenide. In fact there is a 23 percent lattice mismatch, which is huge. Mother Nature really relaxed the rules when it comes to these big differences in atom spacing.

The lead author on the Nano Letters paper is Yu-Chuan Lin, a graduate student in Robinsons lab. Other Penn State coauthors were Ram Krishna Ghosh, a post-doctoral fellow in electrical engineering (EE) who used computer modeling to help the team understand the energy barrier, Jie Li, post-doctoral fellow in EE, Theresa S. Mayer and Suman Datta, professors in EE and Robinson, who along with Lain-Jong Li of the Institute of Atomic and Molecular Sciences, Taiwan, was corresponding author. In a rare bit of serendipity, Jeremy Robinson, a researcher in the Naval Research Laboratory and Joshua Robinsons brother, was also co-author on the paper. Robert Wallace and his students from The University of Texas at Dallas provided TEM images. Contact: Joshua Robinson, jrobinson@psu.edu DOI: 10.1021/nl503144a

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"Mind the Gap" Between Atomically Thin Materials

Tech engineers uncover new method for nanoscale surface properties

Posted: Friday, November 21, 2014 11:19 am

Tech engineers uncover new method for nanoscale surface properties By McKenzi Morris Staff Writer Daily Toreador - Dept. of Student Media, Texas Tech University |

Engineering Researchers at Texas Tech have discovered a new way to characterize surface properties of material at the nanoscale and different temperatures.

Gregory McKenna, a chemical engineering professor and a John R. Bradford Endowed Chair in Engineering, said knowing the properties of materials at different temperature is extremely important in engineering, and was part of the problem during the 1986 space shuttle disaster, according to a Tech news release.

McKenna and graduate student Meiyu Zhai worked together to discover new properties at the nanoscale, according to the release. The results appeared in the Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics.

The nanoscale is a funny range of sizes where materials have properties that are not what we expect, even at a step up at the microscale," McKenna said, according to the release. "We are developing methods to characterize surface properties and relate them to nanoscale behavior using a nanoindenter and other nano-mechanical measurement methods.

The Office of Naval Research, National Science Foundation, and the American Chemical Society-Petroleum Research Fund helped fund McKenna and Zhais project.

Posted in News on Friday, November 21, 2014 11:19 am.

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Tech engineers uncover new method for nanoscale surface properties

Around Town: Newport-based foundation celebrates 25 years

The Newport Beach-based Orange County Community Foundation marked its 25th anniversary Nov. 12 as nearly 700 philanthropists and business and community leaders attended its annual meeting at Hotel Irvine.

Since its founding in 1989, the foundation has awarded more than $300 million in grants and scholarships, supporting the work of nonprofits worldwide.

For more information, visit http://www.oc-cf.org or call (949) 553-4202.

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MIND Research gets $3.2-million gift

The MIND Research Institute of Irvine announced a $3.2-million contribution from The PwC Charitable Foundation to help improve youth financial literacy by developing game-based math instructional software.

MIND's financial-literacy curriculum will be the first to apply the visual ST Math approach toward financial concepts and simultaneously teach math skills required for financial literacy.

The program, geared toward sixth- through eighth-graders, will include areas such as saving and investing, planning and money management, homebuying, environmental sustainability, credit and debit, and risk and insurance.

MIND's programs reach more than 800,000 students and 31,000 teachers in 40 states, according to a news release. For more information, visit http://www.mindresearch.org.

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Around Town: Newport-based foundation celebrates 25 years

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North Carolina researchers unveil a new center for evolutionary medicine

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

21-Nov-2014

Contact: Nicole Duncan nicole.duncan@nescent.org 919-668-7993 National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent) @NESCent

DURHAM, N.C. - A new research center aims to connect scientists, physicians, health policy experts, and veterinarians in the burgeoning field of evolutionary medicine. The Triangle Center for Evolutionary Medicine, or TriCEM, will make its debut this Sunday at the Washington Duke Inn.

The announcement comes as part of a ten-year anniversary celebration and symposium for a similar institute, the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent), which has spearheaded the effort to create TriCEM.

"We are incredibly excited to see the enthusiasm for evolutionary approaches to human and animal health in the Triangle and to see TriCEM take shape," says Charles Nunn, a professor of evolutionary anthropology and global health at Duke University, who will serve as the director. "TriCEM will build on the success of NESCent in stimulating cutting-edge interdisciplinary research in evolutionary biology. At the NESCent Celebration, we will announce our first research and educational efforts and prepare the community for exciting opportunities in the future."

NESCent will close in June 2015 after supporting thousands of researchers, graduate students, working groups, and other projects. After ten years of funding from the National Science Foundation, NESCent leaders wanted to create a new center that would foster collaborations between scientists, physicians, health policy experts, and veterinarians within the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill Triangle area.

"The concentration of research and education in evolutionary biology, human and veterinary medicine, infectious diseases, and agriculture in the Triangle is a tremendous resource," says Allen Rodrigo, director of NESCent. "If we want to build bridges between these disciplines, I can think of no better place to do it."

Capitalizing on the area's wealth of science and health resources, TriCEM seeks potential partnerships with resident universities including Duke, North Carolina State University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and North Carolina Central University.

NESCent and TriCEM have already issued a joint call for proposals for Catalysis Meetings and Graduate Fellowships focusing on evolutionary medicine. NESCent will also make an announcement regarding a Catalysis Meeting between TriCEM and the Tropical Conservation Initiative at Duke.

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North Carolina researchers unveil a new center for evolutionary medicine

Medical, dental program enrolling students

A Bowling Green school to train medical and dental assistants is enrolling students.

The Medical Institute of Kentucky recently had a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 944 Fields Drive, Suite 103, behind OverTime Sports Bar and Grill. Classes have been underway at TMIKY since August, though the building opened in July. The first class will graduate next month.

TMIKY is an accelerated program, taking between 16 and 20 weeks, TMIKY Director Rick Raque said. The students learn a lot in those 16 to 20 weeks, but its all essential and hands-on learning.

No math (classes), no English (classes). Its just focused on skills training in the medical assisting and dental assisting programs, Raque said.

TMIKY also has schools inLouisville, Lexington, Florence, London, Somerset and Mount Sterling, according to its Facebook page.

Students who graduate from TMIKYs programs are nationally certified, allowing them to serve as medical or dental assistants in any state. The National Healthcareer Association, the National Commission for Certifying Agencies and the Better Business Bureau approve TMIKYs programs. TMIKY is a resident license school with the Kentucky Commission of Proprietary Education.

Raque estimated about 95 percent of the students are women, some of them with young children. The program is better suited to those students, Raque said, because its fast-track.

Jenny Rivas of Bowling Green is attending TMIKYs medical assistant program and has an 11-month old and a 2-year-old. Her weekly schedule is packed. On Mondays and Wednesdays, she goes to her externship at a Russellville orthopedic office from 8 a.m. to noon, then squeezes in a couple hours with her daughters before going to her full-time job at Bendix until late in the evening. She goes to class at TMIKY from 8 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Its fast and thats what I needed because I have two girls and I dont have time to go to a program for nine months or two years, Rivas said.

Rivas said the material she learns is the perfect amount for her.

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Medical, dental program enrolling students

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