23 Current news about the topic transmission electron microscopes

rss

You can refine your search further. Select from the filter options on the left to narrow down your results.

image description
Crystal structures in super slow motion

Researchers first to succeed in filming a phase transition with extremely high spatial and temporal resolution

26-Jan-2021

Laser beams can be used to change the properties of materials in an extremely precise way. This principle is already widely used in technologies such as rewritable DVDs. However, the underlying processes generally take place at such unimaginably fast speeds and at such a small scale that they ...

more

New electron microscope method detects atomic-scale magnetism

27-Jun-2016

Scientists can now detect magnetic behavior at the atomic level with a new electron microscopy technique developed by a team from the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Uppsala University, Sweden. The researchers took a counterintuitive approach by taking advantage of ...

more

image description
High-resolution atomic imaging of specimens in liquid by TEM using graphene liquid cell

Looking into specimens on an atomic level in liquids, and understanding atomic processes so far regarded impossible

11-Apr-2012

The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) announced that a research team from the Department of Materials Science and Engineering has developed a technology that enables scientists and engineers to observe processes occurring in liquid media on the smallest possible scale ...

more

image description
New technology allows scientists to watch cancer cells in action at unprecedented resolution

Affinity capture devices provide a platform for viewing cancer cells and other macromolecules in dynamic, life-sustaining liquid environments

03-Feb-2012

A photograph of a polar bear in captivity, no matter how sharp the resolution, can never reveal as much about behavior as footage of that polar bear in its natural habitat. The behavior of cells and molecules can prove even more elusive. Limitations in biomedical imaging technologies have ...

more

SALVE Project Enters Second Phase

Successful evaluation phase prompts University of Ulm and Carl Zeiss to continue with their joint venture to develop a high-performance transmission electron microscope

16-Aug-2011

Following the successful completion of a two-year evaluation phase, the University of Ulm, the Heidelberg-based company CEOS GmbH and Carl Zeiss Nano Technology Systems have signed an agreement to embark on the next phase of the SALVE project. SALVE – which stands for Sub-Angstrom Low Voltage ...

more

Software for the discovery of new crystal structures

16-May-2011

A new software called QED (Quantitative Electron Diffraction), which has been licensed by Max Planck Innovation, has now been released by HREM Research Inc., a Japan based company, which is developing products and services in the field of High-Resolution Electron Microscopy. QED allows ...

more

image description
NIST puts a new twist on the electron beam

24-Jan-2011

Electron microscopes are among the most widely used scientific and medical tools for studying and understanding a wide range of materials, from biological tissue to miniature magnetic devices, at tiny levels of detail. Now, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology ...

more

Researchers image atomic structural changes that control properties of sapphires

02-Dec-2010

Materials scientists from Case Western Reserve University and the Institute of Solid State Research in Jülich, Germany have produced particularly clear changes in the atomic structure of sapphire following deformation at high temperatures. Peering through an electron microscope down to a level ...

more

ERC advanced grant for Professor Zandbergen's 'nanolaboratory'

09-Nov-2010

Henny Zandbergen, professor at the Kavli Institute of NanoScience, has been awarded an ERC Advanced Grant of 2.5 million euros for his research into improved microscopic technologies. The technologies enable Professor Zandbergen to visualise extremely small structures, such as semiconductor ...

more

Pivoting hooks of graphene's chemical cousin could revolutionize work of electron microscopes

03-Nov-2010

The single layer material Graphene was the subject of a Nobel prize this year but research led by a team of researchers at the University of Warwick has found molecular hooks on the surface of its close chemical cousin, Graphene Oxide, that will potentially provide massive benefits to researchers ...

more

Page 1 From 3
Subscribe to e-mail updates relating to your search

You will receive via e-mail the latest search results matching your search criteria. This service is free of charge and can be cancelled at any time.

Your browser is not current. Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 does not support some functions on Chemie.DE