PH40085: Nanoscience
[Page last updated: 04 August 2022]
Academic Year: | 2022/23 |
Owning Department/School: | Department of Physics |
Credits: | 6 [equivalent to 12 CATS credits] |
Notional Study Hours: | 120 |
Level: | Masters UG & PG (FHEQ level 7) |
Period: |
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Assessment Summary: | EX 100% |
Assessment Detail: |
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Supplementary Assessment: |
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Requisites: | Before taking this module you must ( take PH20017 OR take PH20063 ) AND ( take PH30030 OR take PH30043 ) |
Learning Outcomes: | After taking this unit the student should be able to:
* demonstrate a thorough understanding of the impact of the nanoscale on the electronic structure, charge-transport and magnetic properties of materials; * explain the physical properties of low dimensional (two, one- and zero-dimensional) systems; * demonstrate an understanding of the atomic scale connectivity in glassy materials; * describe the interplay between atomic scale structure and properties in glasses; * describe principles of probing at the nanoscale and give examples of physical phenomena that can be accessed; * explain representative properties and novel concepts in topical low-dimensional materials, such as graphene, carbon nanotubes, transition metal dichalcogenides, and silicene. |
Aims: | The aims of this unit are to outline properties of materials at the nanoscale, to describe methods for the fabrication, visualisation and probing of nanostructures, to introduce topical low-dimensional nanomaterials and novel physical concepts related to them, and to give some examples of their possible applications. |
Skills: | Numeracy T/F A, Problem Solving T/F A. |
Content: | Nanoscience and nanotechnology - what are they and how did they arise? (6 hours):
Glass science (5 hours): The glassy state, glass transition, entropy crisis, Kauzmann Paradox, viscosity in glass forming liquids, rigidity, constraint counting theory, glass structure. Probing and manipulation at the nanoscale - The Lab on a Tip (4 hours): 1. Principles of Scanning Tunnelling Microscopy (STM): Imaging & spectroscopy, manipulation of atoms and molecules. Relationship to electronic structure. Spin-related phenomena. Inelastic tunnelling. 2. Principles of Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM): Forces at the nanoscale and AFM modes. Application in material/life sciences. (e.g. chemical, electrical, magnetic properties, self-assembly). Atomically-resolved imaging and probing (e.g. conformation of molecules on surfaces; interaction of two-dimensional materials with substrates). Quantum phenomena at the atomic scale (1 hour): Electron scattering & confinement: Quantum Corrals; Quantum Interference. Molecular "graphene": designer Fermions. Low-dimensional nanomaterials (6 hours): 1. Carbon-based nanomaterials: Bonding and carbon allotropes. Graphene (Dirac cones and linear energy bands; From graphene to graphite; Klein tunnelling; Pseudospin; Engineering electronic properties: graphene in an external potential). Confinement effects: graphene nanoribbons and carbon nanotubes. 2. Other (non-carbon) 2D nanomaterials: Transition Metal Dichalcogenides (types, transition from bulk to monolayer, basic properties). Silicene: a graphene-like monolayer of silicon. Comparison with graphene. |
Programme availability: |
PH40085 is Compulsory on the following programmes:Programmes in Natural Sciences
PH40085 is Optional on the following programmes:Department of Physics
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Notes:
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