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Seminar / Tuesday, 09.07.2019 10:00

Shintaro Fujii (Department of Chemistry, School of Science, Tokyo Institute of Technology)

Understanding charge transport through nanocarbon materials across the metal–molecule interface is a fundamental issue in organic devices. In recent years, single-molecule scale studies on charge transport through the metal–molecule interface have been made possible by break junction techniques. Here, we present our recent singlemolecule transport studies on nanocarbon materials using scanning tunneling microcopy (STM) and break junction techniques in combination with current-voltage measurements and fist principle simulations [1-4].

Bowl-shaped π-conjugated nanocarbons, or...

Seminar / Tuesday, 09.07.2019 14:00 to 16:00

Ken Barat (Laser safety expert, Phoenix, Arizona, USA)

Ken Barat is a long standing expert in Laser Safety, particularly in the Research and Technology arena. He is the former Laser Safety Officer (LSO) for Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, National Ignition Facility Directorate, and Laser Safety Advisor for LIGO, Allen Institute, Newport, and ELI Beamlines. He is also the author of several laser safety texts and articles, including Understanding Laser Accidents, Industrial Laser Safety at a Glance, Laser Safety Tools & Training 2nd edition and Laser Safety in the Lab. Mr. Barat is the chairman of the ANSI Standard committee for Safe Use of...

Seminar / Friday, 12.07.2019 09:00 to 11:00

Dr. Stefan Zollner (Academic Department Head and Professor, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM, USA)

Dr. Stefan Zollner will give a series of public lectures on Optical Properties of Solids for the Institute of Physics. The lectures are recorded and placed online including other materials.

Part XII covers the following topics: Applications II: Properties of thin films, stress/strain, deformation potentials.

The lectures follow the textbook by Mark Fox “Optical Properties of Solids”, with additional materials by the instructor to...

Seminar / Tuesday, 10.09.2019 13:00

prof. Massimo Gurioli (Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Florence, Italy)

The tremendous progress in nanophotonics at the nanoscale has motivated the development of different imaging techniques. Among them scanning near field optical microscopy (SNOM) and, more recently, super-resolution (SR, awarded by 2014 Nobel Prize). I discussed in details the basic differences between SR and SNOM, pointing out their complementary. Then I overviewed our recent SNOM activity for imaging and engineering at the nanoscale, both for semiconductor nanostructures and photonics nano-resonators [1-7].

References
[1] F. Riboli, et al. Nat. Materials 13: 720 (2014) [2] N....

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