FIB SIMS is a modern physical tool for the creation of nanometer sized objects using a focused ion beam. Those nanoobjects can be formed either by the sputtering effect of the ion beam, which we call the nanomachining, or by locally inducing the decomposition of a properly chosen gas adsorbed on the sample surface, which is used for the growth of nanoobjects.
The goal of the thesis is a controlled creation of two- and three-dimensional nanostructures for photonic and sensor applications.
The available facility is a new multifunctional instrument based on a scanning electron microscope, FIB-type ion gun producing Ga+ ions, and a computer controlled gas injection system.
Qualifications: students of physics, chemistry, materials science and related disciplines.
Supervisors: Jan Grym, Ph.D.; Jan Vaniš, Ph.D.
Low dimensional semiconductor structures have been intensively studied for prospective electronic and photonic applications. Diploma or Ph.D. thesis will focus on the preparation of one-dimensional ZnO structures, investigation of their structural, electrical, and optical properties and description of the phenomena occurring when these nanostructures interact with gas molecules and electromagnetic radiation.
Infrastructure:
(I-V and C-V measurements in a wide range of temperatures, DLTS, conductive AFM, STM, Raman and optical spectroscopy, Low temperature photoluminescence, cathodoluminescence).
Qualifications: students of physics, chemistry, materials science and related disciplines.
Supervisors: Roman Yatskiv, Ph.D.; Jan Grym, Ph.D.; Jan Vaniš, Ph.D.