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Scanning Probe Microscopy: Atomic Scale Engineering by Forces and Currents

✍ Scribed by Adam Foster, Werner A. Hofer


Publisher
Springer
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Leaves
291
Series
NanoScience and Technology
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Scanning Probe Microscopy is a comprehensive source of information for researchers, teachers, and graduate students about the rapidly expanding field of scanning probe theory. Writing in a tutorial style, the authors explain from scratch the theory behind today’s simulation techniques and give examples of theoretical concepts through state-of-the-art simulations, including the means to compare these results with experimental data. The book provides the first comprehensive framework for electron transport theory with its various degrees of approximations, thus allowing extensive insight into the physics of scanning probes. Experimentalists will appreciate how the materials properties influence the instrument's operation, and theorists will understand how simulations can be directly compared to experimental data.

Key Features

  • Serves as a comprehensive source of information for researchers, teachers, and students about the theory underlying the rapidly expanding field of scanning probe microscopy
  • Provides a framework for linking scanning probe theory and simulations with experimental data
  • Written in the style of a textbook with step-by-step examples of how theoretical concepts are used to generate state-of-the-art simulations

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<p>The first U. S. Army Natick Research, Development and Engineering Center Atomic Force/Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (AFM/STM) Symposium was held on lune 8-10, 1993 in Natick, Massachusetts. This book represents the compilation of the papers presented at the meeting. The purpose ofthis symposium w

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This proceedings is based on the third Atomic Force Microscopy/Scanning Tunneling Microscopy symposium. The purpose of the meeting was to provide an interface between scientists, engineers, representatives of industry, government, and academia, all of whom have a common interest in probe microsc