* Invited paper
TUTORIAL
FT H: LITHOGRAPHIC AND NONLITHOGRAPHIC METHODS FOR 3D NANOFABRICATION
Sunday, December 1, 2002
2:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Room 201 (Hynes)
Nanotechnology is considered the key technology
of the 21st century and is expected to bring ultimate solutions
to current problems. However, among the issues to address to ensure
the industrial viability of nanotechnology is the selection of
a 3D nanofabrication method that can be scaled up. This tutorial
will describe state-of-the-art lithographic and nonlithographic
methods and critically compare their performances in fields as
diverse as 3D nanostructures, photonic crystals, and electronic
devices.
Instructors:
Shinji Matsui, Himeji Institute of Technology
John A. Rogers, Bell Laboratories, Lucent Technologies
SESSION H1: NANOFABRICATION VIA LITHOGRAPHIC TECHNIQUES
Chairs: Lhadi Merhari and David P. Taylor
Monday Morning, December 2, 2002
Room 309 (Hynes)
8:30 AM *H1.1
INTERFEROMETRIC LITHOGRAPHY AND NANOSCALE- PATTERNED SEMICONDUCTOR
GROWTH. S.R.J. Brueck, Center for High Technology Materials,
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM.
9:00 AM *H1.2
TECHNIQUES AND APPLICATIONS FOR NON-PLANAR LITHOGRAPHY. John
A. Rogers, Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ.
9:30 AM *H1.3
ION PROJECTION DIRECT-STRUCTURING (IPDS) FOR NANOTECHNOLOGY APPLICATIONS.
Hans Loeschner, Elmar Platzgummer, and Gerhard Stengl,
IMS Nanofabrication GmbH, Vienna, AUSTRIA.
10:00 AM BREAK
10:30 AM *H1.4
PROTON BEAM MICROMACHINING: A NEW 3D SUB-100 NM DIRECT-WRITE TECHNIQUE.
Frank Watt, Jeroen van Kan and Andrew Bettiol, Research
Centre for Nuclear Microscopy, Dept of Physics, National University
of Singapore, SINGAPORE.
11:00 AM *H1.5
RESIST REQUIREMENTS AND LIMITATIONS FOR NANOSCALE ELECTRON-BEAM
PATTERNING. J. Alexander Liddle, Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, Berkeley, CA.
11:30 AM H1.6
NANOSCALE PATTERNING OF COBALT-COBALT OXIDE INTERFACES. J.W.
Lau, Y. Zhu, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY.
11:45 AM H1.7
CHEMICAL NANOLITHOGRAPHY WITH ELECTRON BEAMS. Wolfgang Eck,
Armin Gölzhäuser, Wolfgang Geyer, Volker Stadler, Alexander
Küller, Michael Grunze, Angewandte Physikalische Chemie,
Universität Heidelberg, GERMANY; Thomas Weimann, Peter Hinze,
Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Braunschweig, GERMANY.
SESSION H2: PLASMON PROCESSES ON
THE NANOSCALE
Chairs: David P. Taylor and Thomas Orlando
Monday Afternoon, December 2, 2002
Room 309 (Hynes)
1:30 PM *H2.1
SMALL IS DIFFERENT; SOME INTERESTING PROPERTIES OF MATERIAL CONFINED
IN TIME AND NANOMETER SPACE OF DIFFERENT SHAPES. Mostafa A.
El-Sayed, Georgia Institute of Technology, Department of Chemistry
and Biochemistry, Atlanta, GA.
2:00 PM *H2.2
TAILORING NANOPARTICLES WITH LASER LIGHT. Frank Träger,
Universität Kassel, Kassel, GERMANY.
2:30 PM *H2.3
SUBWAVELENGTH SCALE PHOTONIC STRUCTURES. Harry A. Atwater,
Stefan A. Maier, Pieter Kik, Andrea Martin, Thomas J. Watson Laboratory
of Applied Physics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena,
CA.
3:00 PM BREAK
3:30 PM *H2.4
OPTICAL NANOLITHOGRAPHY USING EVANESCENT FIELDS. Richard Blaikie,
Maan Alkaisi, University of Canterbury, Department of Electrical
and Computer Engineering, Christchurch, NEW ZEALAND.
4:00 PM H2.5
PLASMON PRINTING - NANOSCALE PATTERN REPLICATION USING VISIBLE
LIGHT. Andrea L. Martin, Pieter G. Kik, Stefan A. Maier,
Harry A. Atwater, California Institute of Technology, Thomas J.
Watson Laboratory of Applied Physics, Pasadena, CA.
4:15 PM H2.6
THE CONSTRUCTION OF SPERICAL ASSEMBLIES BY GOLD NANOPARTICLES
MEDIATED WITH MULTI-DENTATE THIOETHER LIGANDS. Mathew M. Maye,
Li Han, Stephanie Lim, Chuan-Jian Zhong, Department of Chemistry,
State University of New York at Binghamton, Binghamton, NY; Daniel
Rabinovich, Department of Chemistry, The University of North Carolina
at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC.
4:30 PM H2.7
DIRECTED SELF-ASSEMBLY OF ORDERED METAL NANOCRYSTAL ARRAYS USING
A FOCUSED ION BEAM MICROSCOPE (FIB). M.D. McMahon, A.B.
Hmelo, R. Lopez, R.F. Haglund Jr., L.C. Feldman, Dept of Physics
and Astronomy, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN; R.A. Weller,
Dept of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Vanderbilt
University, Nashville, TN; R.H. Magruder III, Dept of Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science, Vanderbilt University, Nashville,
TN, and Dept of Physics, Belmont University, Nashville, TN.
4:45 PM H2.8
NEW PROCESSING TECHNIQUES FOR THE CREATION OF MICRO-OPTO-ELOECTO-MECHANICAL
MACHINES AND PHOTONIC DEVICE IMBEDDED IN GLASS. Meg Abraham,
Oxford University, Dept of Materials, Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM.
SESSION H3: NANOFABRICATION VIA NONLITHOGRAPHIC TECHNIQUES
Chairs: Thomas Orlando and Koji Ikuta
Tuesday Morning, December 3, 2002
Room 309 (Hynes)
8:30 AM *H3.1
SHAPE VARIATIONS AND CONTROL IN SELF-ASSEMBLED METAL NANOCLUSTERS.
Rina Tannenbaum, Georgia Institute of Technology, School
of Materials Science and Engineering, Atlanta, GA.
9:00 AM H3.2
SELF-ASSEMBLED HIERARCHICAL-STRUCTURES OF EMULSIONS AND FINE PARTICLES.
Sachiko I. Matsushita, RIKEN Frontier Research System,
Dissipative-Hierarchy Structures Lab, Saitama, JAPAN; Nobuhito
Kurono, Masatsugu Shimomura, Hokkaido Univ, Research Institute
for Electronic Science, Hokkaido, JAPAN.
9:15 AM H3.3
VAPOR PHASE DEPOSITED NANOCOMPOSITES OF POLYMER CONTAINING THREE
DIMENSIONALLY DISPERSED METAL CLUSTERS. A. Biswas, J. Kanzow,
J. Kruse, V. Zaporojtchenko, T. Strunskus
and F. Faupel, Lehrstuhl für
Materialverbunde, Technische Fakultaet der CAU, Kiel, GERMANY.
Lehrstuhl für Physikalische
Chemie I, Ruhr-Universitaet, Bochum, GERMANY.
9:30 AM *H3.4
THE FORMATION, CHARACTERIZATION, AND INTEGRATION OF NANOSTRUCTURES:
Ag AND Si. John H. Weaver, University of Illinois, Department
of Materials Science and Engineering, Urbana, IL.
10:00 AM BREAK
10:30 AM *H3.5
WIND-DRIVEN WAVES AT A MOLECULAR SEASHORE. C. Mathew Mate,
IBM Almaden Research Center, San Jose, CA.
11:00 AM *H3.6
RESOLUTION, FIDELITY, AND REGISTRATION OF DIRECTLY PRINTED PATTERNS
OF MICROELECTRONIC MATERIALS. Sigurd Wagner, Scott M. Miller,
Anton A. Darhuber, Samir Succar, and Sandra M. Troian, Depts of
Electrical and of Chemical Engineering, Princeton University,
Princeton, NJ.
11:30 AM H3.7
DIRECT IMPRINTING OF A LASER FEEDBACK STRUCTURE INTO A LIQUID-CRYSTALLINE
ELECTROACTIVE CONJUGATED POLYMER. Erik Moderegger, Guenther
Leising, AT&S AG, Science & Technology Scientific, Leoben,
AUSTRIA; Emil J.W. List, Christian Doppler Laboratory for Advanced
Functional Materials, Graz University of Technology & Joanneum
Research, Graz, AUSTRIA; Roland Guentner, Ullrich Scherf, University
of Potsdam, Institute for Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,
Golm, GERMANY.
11:45 AM H3.8
NANOSCALE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY - A GATEWAY TO NEW PRODUCTS,
PROCESSES AND PROPERTIES IN THE CHEMICAL INDUSTRY. Raymond
Oliver, David Sutton, Derek Graham, ICI Strategic Technology
Group, Redcar, UNITED KINGDOM.
SESSION H4: FABRICATION AND PROPERTIES OF 2D-ORDERED NANOSTRUCTURES
Chairs: Koji Ikuta and Lhadi Merhari
Tuesday Afternoon, December 3, 2002
Room 309 (Hynes)
1:30 PM *H4.1
TWO-DIMENSIONAL ORDERED NANO PORE ARRAYS: FABRICATION AND FILLING
WITH MATERIALS. Ulrich Goesele, Kornelius Nielsch, Frank
Mueller, Sven Matthias, Manfred Reiche, Ralf Wehrspohn, Jinsub
Choi, Max Planck Institute of Microstructure Physics, Halle, GERMANY.
2:00 PM *H4.2
3-D NANOSTRUCTURE FABRICATION BY NANOIMPRINT LITHOGRAPHY &
LITHOGRAPHICALLY INDUCED SELF-ASSEMBLY Paru Deshpande,
Zhaoning Yu, Wei Wu, Mingtao Li, Bo Cui, Xinya Lei and Stephen
Y. Chou, NanoStructure Laboratory, Department of Electrical Engineering,
Princeton University, Princeton, NJ.
2:30 PM *H4.3
OPTOELECTRONIC NANOSTRUCTURES. Gernot S. Pomrenke, Air
Force Office of Scientific Research, Arlington, VA.
3:00 PM BREAK
3:30 PM H4.4
SELF-ASSEMBLY OF NANOSHEETS USING MAGNETIC FIELD. Jean-Christophe
P. Gabriel
, Franck Camerel,
Patrick Batail, Sciences Moléculaires aux Interfaces, CNRS,
Nantes, FRANCE; Bruno J. Lemaire, Patrick Davidson, Lab Physique
des Solides, CNRS, Orsay Univ, FRANCE; Hervé Desvaux, Service
de Chimie Moléculaire, CEA, Saclay, Gif-sur-Yvette, FRANCE;
Present address: Nanomix
Inc., Emerville, CA.
3:45 PM H4.5
GELATION OF A SYNTHETIC,
-SHEET-DERIVED
PEPTIDE. Nathan Lockwood, Univ of Minnesota, Dept of Chemical
Engineering and Materials Science; Robert van Tankeren, Kevin
Mayo, Univ of Minnesota, Dept of Biochemistry, Minneapolis, MN.
4:00 PM H4.6
SYNTHESIS AND CHARACTERIZATION OF METAL NANO-PARTICLES IN AMORPHOUS
CARBON FILMS. I. Gerhards, H. Hofsäss, and C. Ronning,
II. Physikalisches Institut; H. Gibhardt, Institut für Physikalische
Chemie; M. Seibt, IV. Physikalisches Institut, Universität
Göttingen, Göttingen, GERMANY.
4:15 PM H4.7
A BOTTOM-UP APPROACH TO POLYMER/CARBON NANOTUBE FILMS. Jason
H. Rouse
, Peter T. Lellehei
, Emilie J. Siochi
;
ICASE
; Advanced Materials
and Processing Branch
; NASA-Langley
Research Center, Hampton, VA.
4:30 PM H4.8
SELF-ORGANIZED ZnO NANOSIZE ISLANDS WITH LOW-DIMENSIONAL CHARACTERISTICS
ON SiO
/Si SUBSTRATES BY
METALORGANIC CHEMICAL VAPOR DEPOSITION. Sang-Woo Kim, Shigeo
Fujita, Kyoto Univ, Dept of Electronic Science and Engineering,
Kyoto, JAPAN; Shizuo Fujita, Kyoto Univ, International Innovation
Center, Kyoto, JAPAN.
4:45 PM H4.9
MORPHOLOGY EVOLUTION OF PYRAMID-LIKE NANOSTRUCTURES ON COBALT
THIN FILMS DURING DEPOSITION BY SPUTTERING. Shih-Wei Chen,
Jin-Ruey Wen, Chuan-Pu Liu, Department of Materials Science and
Engineering, National Cheng-Kung University, Tainan, TAIWAN; Jiun-Nan
Chen, Department of Electrical Engineering, Fortune Institute
of Technology, Kaohsiung, TAIWAN.
SESSION H5: FABRICATION AND PROPERTIES OF NANOWIRES, NANORODS AND NANOTUBES
Chairs: Koji Ikuta and Thomas Orlando
Wednesday Morning, December 4, 2002
Room 309 (Hynes)
8:30 AM *H5.1
SELF-ASSEMBLY OF MULTIDIMENSIONAL NANOROD STRUCTURES ON SURFACES.
Sarah K. St. Angelo, Benjamin R. Martin, Thomas J. Larrabee,
Thomas E. Mallouk, The Pennsylvania State University, Department
of Chemistry, State College, PA.
9:00 AM *H5.2
NANOWIRES AND NANOSPRINGS: UNEXPECTED CATALYST MEDIATED GROWTH
PHENOMENA. David N. McIlroy, D. Zhang, A. Alkhateeb, H.
Han, University of Idaho, Dept. of Physics, Moscow, ID; M. Grant
Norton, Washington State University, School of Mech. and Mat.
Eng., Pullman, WA.
9:30 AM H5.3
CARBON NANOTUBE-CONDUCTING POLYMER NANOCOMPOSITES: STRUCTURE AND
ELECTROCHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Mark Hughes, George Z. Chen,
Milo S.P. Shaffer, Derek J. Fray, Alan H. Windle, University of
Cambridge, Dept of Materials Science and Metallurgy, Cambridge,
UNITED KINGDOM.
9:45 AM H5.4
ELECTRON AND LIGHT EMISSION FROM CARBON NANOTUBES AND CdS NANOWIRES.
Jun Jiao, Lifeng Dong, David W. Tuggle, Jeremy Petty, Logan
Love, Trenton J. McKinney, Portland State Univ., Dept of Physics,
Portland, OR.
10:00 AM BREAK
10:30 AM *H5.5
GRAPHITE-BASED ELECTRONICS. Claire Berger, Yan Yi, and Walt
A. de Heer, School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology,
Atlanta, GA.
11:00 AM H5.6
GRAPHYNE NANOTUBES: NEW FAMILIES OF CARBON NANOTUBES. Vitor R.
Coluci, Scheila F. Braga, Sergio B. Legoas, Douglas S.
Galvao, Applied Physics Department, State University of Campinas,
SP, BRAZIL; Ray H. Baughman, NanoTech Institute and Department
of Chemistry, University of Texas at Dallas, Dallas, TX.
11:15 AM H5.7
FIELD EMISSION PROPERTIES OF BN/C AND BN@C NANOTUBES. Vincent
Meunier, Thomas Zacharia, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak
Ridge, TN; Christopher Roland, J. Bernholc, North Carolina State
University, Raleigh, NC; Marco Buongiorno Nardelli, North Carolina
State University, Raleigh, NC and Oak Ridge National Laboratory,
Oak Ridge, TN.
11:30 AM *H5.8
METAL NANOWIRES ARRAYS FOR CHEMICAL SENSING. Reg Penner,
Department of Chemistry, University of California-Irvine, Irvine,
CA.
SESSION H6: PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY AND MODELING OF NANOSTRUCTURES
Chairs: Lhadi Merhari and Thomas Orlando
Wednesday Afternoon, December 4, 2002
Room 309 (Hynes)
1:30 PM *H6.1
BIOLOGICALLY INSPIRED CONTROLS OVER ASSEMBLY OF CRYSTALLINE NANOSTRUCTURES.
J.J. De Yoreo, C.A. Orme, S.R. Qiu, C.L. Cheung, Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory; P.M. Dove, K.J. Davis, Virginia
Polytechnic Institute; M. Kurimoto, B. Kahr, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA.
2:00 PM H6.2
PHOTO-CONTROL OF NANO-INTERACTIONS IN MICROSYSTEMS. Nelson
S. Bell, B.G. Potter, K. Simmons-Potter, Joe Thomes, John
Lean, Chad Staiger, Doug Loy, and Greg Jamison, Sandia National
Laboratories, Materials Chemistry, Albuquerque, NM.
2:15 PM H6.3
ATTACHMENT OF GOLD NANOPARTICLES TO CARBON NANOTUBES BY CHEMICAL
MANIPULATION. Kuiyang Jiang, Ami Eitan, Linda S. Schadler, Pulickel
M. Ajayan, Mauricio Terrones
, Richard
W. Siegel, Rensselaer Nanotechnology Center, Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, Troy, NY;
Fullerence
Science Center, CPES, University of Sussex, Brighton, UNITED KINGDOM.
2:30 PM H6.4
PHASE TRANSITIONS IN OCTANETHIOL-CAPPED NANOCLUSTER ASSEMBLIES.
A.V Ellis, R. Goswami, K. Vijayamohanan, Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, Dept of Material Science and Engineering, Troy, NY;
C. Ryu, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Dept of Chemistry, Troy,
NY; G. Ramanath, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Dept
of Material Science and Engineering, Troy, NY.
2:45 PM H6.5
CRITICAL UNIVERSALITY AND MAGNETIC PHASE TRANSITIONS OF A MODEL
NANOCRYSTALLINE FERROMAGNET: A MONTE CARLO STUDY. Guang-Ping
Zheng and Mo Li, School of Materials Science and Engineering,
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA.
3:00 PM BREAK
3:30 PM H6.6
SUPERCONFROMAL FILM GROWTH IN SUBMICRON FEATURES. T.P. Moffat,
D. Wheeler, B. Baker and D. Josell, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD.
3:45 PM H6.7
Abstract Withdrawn
4:00 PM H6.8
FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF NANOSCALE THERMAL MEASUREMENTS OF SUPERLATTICES.
Jason R. Foley and C. Thomas Avedisian, Thermal Sciences
Laboratory, Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering,
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.
4:15 PM *H6.9
PROCESSING IN MATERIALS THAT MEDIATE THREE-DIMENSIONAL FABRICATION.
H. Helvajian, Laboratory Operations, The Aerospace Corporation,
Los Angeles, CA.
4:45 PM H6.10
EVOLUTION OF CARBON SELF-ASSEMBLY IN COLLOIDAL PHASE DIAGRAM.
Vaclav Bouda, Czech Tech Univ, Dept Mechanics and Materials
Science, Prague, CZECH REP.
SESSION H7: POSTER SESSION
SYNTHESIS, PROPERTIES AND APPLICATIONS OF 1D/2D/3D NANOSTRUCTURES
Chairs: Lhadi Merhari and David P. Taylor
Wednesday Evening, December 4, 2002
8:00 PM
Exhibition Hall D (Hynes)
H7.1
DIRECT NANOSCALE PATTERNING OF SOFT AND HARD MAGNETIC NANOSTRUCTURES
VIA DIP-PEN NANOLITHOGRAPHY (DPN). Lei Fu, Vinayak P. Dravid,
Dept. of Materials Science & Engineering; Xiaogang Liu, and
Chad A. Mirkin, Dept. of Chemistry, Northwestern University, Evanston,
IL.
H7.2
TEM ANALYSIS OF FIB PREPARED CROSS-SECTIONS OF THE ELASTOMER STAMPS
AND IMPRINTED PATTERENS FOR NANO-LITHOGRAPHY. Richard Langford,
Amanda Petford-Long, Oxford Univ, Dept. of Materials, Oxford,
UNITED KINGDOM.
H7.3
FROM SELF-ORDERING TOWARDS IMPRINT LITHOGRAPHY: LARGE-SCALE SYNTHESIS
OF MONODISPERSE NANORODS. Kornelius Nielsch, Jinsub Choi,
Ralf B. Wehrspohn, Herbert Hofmeister, and Ulrich Gösele,
Max-Planck-Institute of Microstructure Physics, Halle, GERMANY;
Guido Sauer, Georg Brehm, and Siegfried Schneider, Institute of
Physical Chemistry, University of Erlangen, GERMANY.
H7.4
FORMATION OF CARBON NANOTUBES ON NICKEL FILMS/PARTICLES USING
CVD. Stephane Bazzana and Al Sacco Jr., Center for Advanced
Microgravity Materials Processing, Department of Chemical Engineering,
Northeastern University Boston, MA.
H7.5
SYNTHESIS AND CHARACTERISATION OF CATALYST-FREE CARBON NANOTUBES
FROM SILICON CARBIDE PRECURSORS. Elen S. Humphreys, Sung-Yoon
Chung, John B. Vander Sande and Yet-Ming Chiang, Dept. of
Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Cambridge, MA.
H7.6
SIMPLE USE OF SiO
FILM THICKNESS FOR
THE CONTROL OF CARBON NANO-TUBE DIAMETER DURING FERROCENE CATALYZED
CVD GROWTH. Nitin Chopra, Bruce Hinds, Dept. of Chemical
and Materials Eng., University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY; Padmaker
Kichambare, Rodney Andrews, Center for Applied Energy Research,
University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
H7.7
FIB-ASSISTED Pt DEPOSITION FOR CARBON NANOTUBE INTEGRATION AND
3-D NANOENGINEERING. K. Dovidenko, J. Rullan, K. Dunn,
R. Moore, F. Heuchling. University at Albany-SUNY, School of NanoSciences
and NanoEngineering, UAlbany Institute for Materials, Albany,
NY.
H7.8
GROWTH OF WELL-DEFINED CARBON NANOTUBES ON ATOMIC FORCE MICROSCOPY
PROBES SUITABLE FOR METROLOGY APPLICATIONS. Y.N. Emirov, J.D.
Schumacher, M. Beerbom, University of South Florida; D.A. Walters,
University of Central Florida; Z.F. Ren, Z.P. Huang, Boston College;
B.B. Rossie, Agere Systems; and R. Schlaf, University of
South Florida.
H7.9
BUILDING MACRO-SCALE NETWORKS AND BRIDGES OF ALIGNED CARBON NANOTUBES.
Anyuan Cao, Bingqing Wei, P.M. Ajayan, G. Ramanath, Dept
of Materials Science & Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, Troy, NY.
H7.10
VERTICAL ALIGNMENTS OF SINGLE-WALLED CARBON NANOTUBES ON CHEMICALLY
FUNCTIONALIZED SILICON SUBSTRATES. Ha Jin Lee, Hyeyoung Park,
Sunyoung Koo, Haiwon Lee, Hanyang University, Department
of Chemistry, Seoul, KOREA.
H7.11
CONTROLLED DEPOSITION AND APPLIED FIELD ALIGNMENT OF SINGLE WALLED
CARBON NANOTUBES FOR CNT DEVICE FABRICATION. Jan Smits,
Lockheed Martin Space Operations, Hampton, VA; Buzz Wincheski,
NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA; JoAnne Ingram, Swales
Aerospace, Hampton, VA; Neal Watkins, Swales Aerospace, Hampton,
VA; Jeffrey Jordan, NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA.
H7.12
Abstract Withdrawn
H7.13
Transferred to H5.3
H7.14
HYDROPHOBIC ATTACHMENT OF GOLD NANOCLUSTERS TO CARBON NANOTUBES.
K. Vijayamohanan, Materials Science and Engineering Dept, Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY; A.V. Ellis, Materials
Science and Engineering Dept, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
Troy, NY; R. Goswami, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy,
NY; N. Chakrapani, Materials Science and Engineering Dept, Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, Troy; L.S. Ramanathan, Chemistry Dept,
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY; P.M. Ajayan, G. Ramanath,
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY.
H7.15
NANOSTRUCTURED MATERIALS ON CARBON NANOWALL TEMPLATES. Yihong
Wu, National University of Singapore, Dept of Electrical and
Computer Engineering, Singapore and Data Storage Institute, SINGAPORE;
Bingjun Yang, National University of Singapore, Dept of Physics,
Singapore and Data Storage Institute, SiINGAPORE.
H7.16
EFFECT OF SITE DENSITY OF ALIGNED CARBON NANOTUBES ARRAY ON ELECTRIC
FIELD SCREENING. Yi Tu, Zhongping Huang, Dezhi Wang, Zhifeng
Ren, Dept of Physics, Chestnut Hill, MA.
H7.17
Abstract Withdrawn
H7.18
FABRICATION OF CARBON NANOTUBE LATERAL FIELD EMITTERS. A.S. Teh,
K.B.K. Teo, Manish Chhowalla, W.I. Milne, G.A.J. Amaratunga,
Cambridge University, Engineering Dept., Cambridge, UNITED KINGDOM;
S.-B. Lee, H. Ahmed, Cambridge University, Cavendish Laboratory,
Cambridge, UNITED KINGDOM.
H7.19
FIELD EMISSION FROM RUTHENIUM CONTAINING MULTIWALLED CARBON NANOTUBES.
Padmakar Kichambare, Dali Qian, David Jacques, Rodney Andrews,
University of Kentucky, Center for Applied Energy Research, Lexington,
KY.
H7.20
Zn
Mg
O
NANORODS VIA MOLECULAR BEAM EPITAXY. Young Woo Heo, V.
Varadarajan, K. Kim, Michael Kaufman, David Norton, University
of Florida, Dept. of Materials Science and Engr, Gainesville,
FL; Matthew Chisholm, Solid State Div., Oak Ridge National Laboratory,
Oak Ridge, TN.
H7.21
ZnO NANOWIRE GROWTH ON VARIOUS SUBSTRATES BY CVD THROUGH VAPOR-LIQUID-SOLID
CRYSTAL GROWTH MECHANISM. Hyun-Gi Hong, Jung Inn Sohn, Youn-Su
Kim, Seonghoon Lee, Department of Materials Science and
Engineering, Kwangju Institute of Science and Technology (K-JIST),
Kwangju, KOREA.
H7.22
CONDUCTING NANOWIRES AND NANOTUBE MATERIALS PREPARED FROM POLYMER
FIBER TEMPLATES. Hong Dong, Verrad Nyame, Frederick Ochanda, and
Wayne E. Jones Jr., Chemistry Department and Institute
for Materials Research, State University of New York at Binghamton,
NY.
H7.23
UNIDIRECTIONALLY ORIENTED NANORIBBON-DYE HYBRID MATERIALS CREATED
BY SELF-ASSEMBLY AND ELECTROPHORESIS. Leiming Li, Guizhong
Zhang, John C. Stendahl, Eugene R. Zubarev, and Samuel I. Stupp,
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Department of
Chemistry, Medical School, Northwestern University, Evanston,
IL.
H7.24
THERMOELECTRIC NANOWIRES BY TEMPLATE SYNTHESIS: FABRICATION, CONTACTS
AND PROPERTIES. Oded Rabin
,
Yu-Ming Lin
, Stephen B. Cronin
, Gang Chen
, Mildred S. Dresselhaus
, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Dept. of Chemistry,
Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science,
Department of Physics,
and
Dept. of Mechanical
Engineering, Cambridge, MA.
H7.25
Abstract Withdrawn
H7.26
RATIONAL CONTROL OF NANOSCALE HELICAL MORPHOLOGIES THROGH BINARY
SELF-ASSEMBLY. George John, Jong Hwa Jung, Kaname Yoshida,
Hiroyuki Minamikawa, Toshimi Shimizu, CREST, Japan Science and
Technology Corporation, Nanoarchitectonics Research Center, National
Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Tsukuba,
JAPAN.
H7.27
SYNTHESIS BY SELF-ASSEMBLY OF IRON-COBALT NANOALLOYS. Melissa
Zubris, Rina Tannenbaum, Georgia Institute of Technology,
School of Materials Science and Engineering, Atlanta, GA.
H7.28
ORGANIC MOLECULES ACTING AS TEMPLATES ON Cu(110). Federico
Rosei, Y. Naitoh, M. Schunack, E. Legsgaard, I. Stensgaard,
and F. Besenbacher, Physics Department and I-NANO, University
of Aarhus, DENMARK; P. Jiang, A. Gourdon, and C. Joachim CEMES
- CNRS Toulouse, FRANCE.
H7.29
SELF-ASSEMBLY OF METAL-OXIDE NANOSTRUCTURES: OXIDATION OF Cu FILMS
BY IN-SITU UHV-TEM. Guangwen Zhou, Judith C. Yang, Materials
Science and Engineering Dept, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh,
PA.
H7.30
A GENERALIZED FLUID-FORMING METHOD FOR SELF-ASSEMBLY OF PARTICLES
INTO PLANAR ARRAYS. X. Liu, Dept of Ceramic and Materials
Engineering, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Piscataway,
NJ; E.F. McCandlish, Ceramar Corporation, New Brunswick, NJ; F.
Cosandey, K. Mikulka-Bolen, Dept of Ceramic and Materials Engineering,
Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Piacataway, NJ; L.E.
McCandlish, Ceramar Corporation, New Brunswick, NJ; R.E. Riman,
Dept of Ceramic and Materials Engineering, Rutgers, the State
University of New Jersey, Piacataway, NJ.
H7.31
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CONTROL OF MORPHOLOGY TITANIA BASED PHOTONIC
BANDGAP STRUCTURES. Bonnie Gersten, Samuel Hirsch and Jennifer
Synowczynski, Processing and Properties Branch, WMRD, US Army
Research Laboratory, Aberdeen Proving Grounds, MD.
H7.32
THE IMPORTANCE OF NOTHING IN NANOARCHITECTURES. Debra R. Rolison,
Jeffrey W. Long, Erik M. Lucas, Christopher P. Rhodes, Jeremy
J. Pietron, Jean Marie Wallace, Wendy S. Baker, Rhonda M. Stroud,
Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC.
H7.33
SYNTHESIS AND PROPERTIES OF HYDROGEL CRYSTALS. Xihua Lu,
Zhibing Hu, University of North Texas, Dept of Materials Science
and Physics, Denton, TX.
H7.34
DEVELOPMENT OF METAL-SILICA NANOCOMPOSITES IN A SINGLE STEP PROCESS
BY THE POLYMERIZABLE COMPLEX METHOD. E.R. Leite, N.L.V.
Carreo, E. Longo, J.F.R. Bachega and F.M. Pontes, CMDMC-LIEC,
Departmento de Quimica, UFSCar, Sao Carlos, SP, BRAZIL; A. Barison,
A.G. Ferreira, Departmento de QuImica, UFSCar, Sao Carlos, SP,
BRAZIL; J.A. Varela, Instituto de QuImica, UNESP, Araraquara,
SP, BRAZIL.
H7.35
SELF-ASSEMBLED ORGANIC/INORGANIC NANOCOMPOSITES. Byron Mccaughey,
Donghai Wang, Eric Hampsey, Xianglin Ji, and Yunfeng Lu,
Chemical Engineering Department, Tulane University, New Orleans,
LA.
H7.36
NANOPARTICLE INKS FOR DIRECTED ASSEMBLY OF 3-D PERIODIC STRUCTURES.
Qi Li, Gregory Gratson, and Jennifer A. Lewis, University
of Illinois, Urbana, IL; James Smay, Oklahoma State University,
Stillwater, OK.
H7.37
WET PROCESS MOLECULAR PLANTING IN A SPECIFIC SITE OF SILIOCN WITH
Si-C COVALENT BONDS. Hirokazu Tada, Masato Ara, Shoji Tanaka,
Institute for Molecular Science, Okazaki, JAPAN.
H7.38
DENDRIMER MEDIATED `BRICKS AND MORTAR' SELF-ASSEMBLY OF NANOPARTICLES.
Benjamin L. Frankamp, Andrew K. Boal, Vincent M. Rotello,
University of Massachusetts, Department of Chemistry, Amherst,
MA.
H7.39
SELF ASSEMBLY OF MAGNETIC AND SEMICONDUCTING NANOPARTICLES: BUILDING
BLOCKS FOR NANO- TECHNOLOGY. Franz Redl, Stephen O'Brien,
Ming Yin, Stephanie Grancharov, Columbia University, Materials
Science and Engineering, Dept of Applied Physics, New York, NY;
Christopher B. Murray, K-S. Cho, Glenn Held, IBM T.J. Watson Research
Center, Yorktown Heights, NY.
H7.40
SYNTHESIS, STRUCTURE, AND MAGNETIC PROPERTIES OF Fe
Pt
Cu
NANOCOMPOSITE PARTICLES. Xiang-Cheng
Sun, D.E. Nikles, S.S. Kang, J.W. Harrell, Center for Materials
for Information Technology, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa,
AL; Z.R. Dai, J. Li, Z.L. Wang, School of Materials Science and
Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA.
H7.41
MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS STUDY OF THE MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF METAL
NANOWIRES. T. Nakajima, K. Shintani, Univ of Electro-Comm,
Dept of ME & Intelligent Sys, Tokyo, JAPAN.
H7.42
EFFECTIVE MEDIUM CALCULATIONS OF THE ELECTROMAGNETIC BEHAVIOR
OF SINGLE WALLED CARBON NANOTUBE COMPOSITES. John W. Schultz,
Georgia Tech Research Institute, Atlanta, GA.
H7.43
IONIC COLLOIDAL CRYSTALS PRODUCED VIA CONTROLLED HETEROCOAGULATION.
Garry R. Maskaly, R. Edwin Garcia, W. Craig Carter, Yet-Ming
Chiang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept of Materials
Science, Cambridge, MA.
H7.44
AB INTIO STUDY OF THE ANODIZATION PROCESS OF CRYSTALLINE SILICON
IN THE PRESENCE OF HF. Thompson Le Blanc, Daniel Melendez,
Ivan Cao-Berg, Javier Avalos, Univ. Metropolitana, San Juan, PR.
SESSION H8: FABRICATION AND PROPERTIES OF 3D-ORDERED NANOSTRUCTURES
Chairs: David P. Taylor and Koji Ikuta
Thursday Morning, December 5, 2002
Room 309 (Hynes)
8:30 AM *H8.1
THREE-DIMENSIONAL NANOSTRUCTURE FABRICATION BY FOCUSED-ION-BEAM
CHEMICAL VAPOR DEPOSITION. Shinji Matsui, Himeji Institute
of Technology, Kamigori, Ako, Hyogo, JAPAN.
9:00 AM H8.2
FORMATION OF 3-DIMENSIONALLY ORIENTATED NANO-SIZED CRYSTALS IN
AN AMORPHOUS ALLOY UNDER ION BEAM IRRADIATION. Ryuichi Tarumi,
Takuya Kamikawa, Kazuki Takashima and Yakichi Higo, Tokyo
Inst of Technology, Tokyo, JAPAN.
9:15 AM H8.3
NANOMETER-SCALE PATTERN TRANSFER BY ION IMPLANTATION AND SELECTIVE
CHEMICAL ETCHING. Naomi Matsuura, Xiang-Yang Mei, P. Morales,
Harry E. Ruda, University of Toronto, Dept of Materials Science
and Engineering, Toronto, CANADA; Todd W. Simpson, Chris
P. McNorgan, Ian V. Mitchell, University of Western Ontario, Dept.
of Physics & Astronomy, London, CANADA.
9:30 AM H8.4
3D MICRO- AND NANO-FABRICATION OF METAL NANOPARTICLE PATTERNS
AND CONDUCTIVE METAL STRUCTURES VIA ONE- AND TWO-PHOTON INDUCED
LITHOGRAPHIC AND HOLOGRAPHIC METHODS. Francesco Stellacci,
Christina A. Bauer, Wim Wenseleers, Timo Meyer-Friedrichsen, Valérie
Alain, Stephen M. Kuebler, Seth R. Marder, Joseph W. Perry, Department
of Chemistry, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ.
9:45 AM H8.5
FABRICATION OF PERFORATED FILM NANOSTRUCTURES. A.L. Elias,
K.D. Harris and M.J. Brett, Dept of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
Univ of Alberta, Edmonton, CANADA.
10:00 AM BREAK
10:30 AM *H8.6
NANOTECTONICS: FABRICATION OF INORGANIC TRANSISTORS AND MICRO-ELECTRO-MECHANICAL
SYSTEMS FROM NANOPARTICLE BUILDING BLOCKS. Joseph Jacobson,
Eric Wilhelm, Colin Bulthaup and Brent Ridley, The MIT Media Lab
Center for Bits and Atoms, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA.
11:00 AM H8.7
ASSEMBLY OF SEMICONDUCTOR AND MAGNETIC NANOCRYSTALS INTO BINARY
NANOCRYSTAL SUPERLATTICES. F.X. Redl, IBM Corp; K.S. Cho,
IBM Corp and University of New Orleans; C.B. Murray, IBM Corp,
Yorktown Heights, NY.
11:15 AM H8.8
SYNTHESES OF COMPLEX-SHAPED, 3D, SELF-ASSEMBLED NANOPARTICLE STRUCTURES
WITH TAILORED CHEMISTRIES BY THE BASIC PROCESS. Frank Zalar, Matthew
Dickerson, Raymond Unocic, Ken Sandhage, Dept of Materials
Science and Engineering, Ohio State Univ, Columbus, OH; Rajesh
Naik, Gunjan Agarwal, Morley Stone, Materials and Manufacturing
Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB,
OH.
11:30 AM H8.9
NANOPARTICLE RIBBONS: A METHOD FOR FABRICATING COMPLEX 3-D ELECTRONIC
CIRCUITS. Venugopal Santhanam, Ronald P. Andres, Purdue
Univ, School of Chemical Engineering, West Lafayette, IN; Jaewon
Choi, David B. Janes, Purdue Univ, School of Electrical and Computer
Engineering, West Lafayette, IN; Stephen W. Howell, Ronald Reifenberger,
Purdue Univ, Department of Physics, West Lafayette, IN; Scott
E. Burns, Clifford P. Kubiak, University of California, San Diego,
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, La Jolla, CA.
11:45 AM H8.10
3D NANOENGINEERING OF METAL OXIDES AND OXYHYDROXIDES FROM AQUEOUS
SOLUTION. Lionel Vayssieres, Arumugam Manthiram, Texas
Materials Institute, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin,
TX.
SESSION H9: APPLICATIONS OF FUNCTIONAL NANOSTRUCTURES
Chairs: Lhadi Merhari and David P. Taylor
Thursday Afternoon, December 5, 2002
Room 309 (Hynes)
1:30 PM *H9.1
ADVANCED CHEMICAL GAS SENSORS FOR OUTDOOR AIR QUALITY MONITORING.
Marie-Isabelle Baraton, UMR CNRS 6638, Faculty of Sciences,
Limoges, FRANCE.
2:00 PM H9.2
CHARACTERIZATION OF NANOASSEMBLED TIN-OXIDE NANOPARTICLES FOR
FABRICATION OF A HIGH SELECTIVITY MICRO GAS SENSOR. R.C. Ghan,
Y. Lvov, R.S. Besser, Institute for Micromanufacturing
and Chemical Engineering, Louisiana Tech University, Ruston, LA.
2:15 PM *H9.3
NANOMECHANICAL SYSTEMS. H.G. Craighead, Applied and Engineering
Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.
2:45 PM H9.4
OPTICALLY DRIVEN MICROMANIPULATION TOOLS FABRICATED BY TWO-PHOTON
MICROSTEREO- LITHOGRAPHY. Shoji Maruo, Koji Ikuta and Hayato
Korogi, Department of Micro System Engineering, School of Engineering,
Nagoya University, Aichi, JAPAN.
3:00 PM BREAK
3:30 PM *H9.5
BIOLOGY DOES IT DIFFERENTLY. HOW CAN WE HARNESS ITS ADVANTAGES?
Daniel E. Morse, Jan Sumerel, Wenjun Yang, James Weaver,
Germaine Fu, Timothy Deming, Bradley F. Chmelka, Galen D. Stucky
and Paul K. Hansma, University of California at Santa Barbara,
Biomolecular Science and Engineering and Materials Research Laboratory,
Santa Barbara, CA.
4:00 PM *H9.6
FABRICATION OF 3-D BIOACTIVE STRUCTURES. Kenneth E. Gonsalves,
Dept. of Chemistry & C.C. Cameron, Applied Research Center,
Univ. of North Carolina, Charlotte, NC; Wei He, Dept. of
Chemistry, Univ. of Connecticut, Storrs, CT; Ashutosh Chilkoti,
Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC.
4:30 PM *H9.7
BIO-INSPIRED SELF ASSEMBLY OF MICRO- AND NANO-STRUCTURES FOR SENSING
AND ELECTRONIC APPLICATION. H.McNally
,
S.W. Lee
, D. Guo
,
M. Pingle
, D. Bergstrom
, R. Bashir
; School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
; Department of Medicinal Chemistry
, Department of Biomedical Engineering
; Purdue University, W. Lafayette,
IN.