Einladung zum Vortrag im Kolloquium
Technische Kybernetik
High-Speed Atomic Force
Microscopy:
Scanner Design and
Control Issues
Prof. Dr. Reza Moheimani
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
University of Newcastle, Australia
Friday, 27. January 2012, 2:00 p.m.
IST-Seminar-Room 3.243 - Pfaffenwaldring 9 -
Campus Stuttgart-Vaihingen
Abstract
Over the last two decades we have
observed astonishing progress in nanotechnology. This
progress is partially due to the invention of Atomic Force
Microscope (AFM) in the 1980s, which has had a significant
impact on numerous fields. A conventional atomic force
microscope is rather slow, taking up to a minute or longer
to develop an image. A high-speed atomic force microscope
is needed to acquire high resolution, three-dimensional,
time-lapse images of fast processes such as the rapid
movement of cells and the diffusion of DNA molecules.
In this talk we concentrate on the mechanical design of
high-speed scanners, the fundamental role of feedback, and
the need for model-based control design methods in
increasing accuracy and speed of operation of atomic force
microscopes. We also will explain how similar ideas have
led to the highest reported data storage density in a
probe-based data storage device, in which an array of
several thousands of AFM-type levers are used to store
digital information as tiny indentation on a polymer
storage medium.
Biographical Information
Reza Moheimani joined The University of
Newcastle, Australia in 1997, where he founded and directs
the Laboratory for Dynamics and Control of Nanosystems, a
multi-million-dollar state-of-the-art research facility
dedicated to the advancement of nanotechnology through
innovations in systems and control engineering. He is a
Professor and an Australian Research Council (ARC) Future
Fellow with the School of Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science at The University of Newcastle. His
current research interests are mainly in the area of
dynamics and control at the nanometer scale, and include
applications of control and estimation in nanopositioning
systems for high-speed scanning probe microscopy, modeling
and control of micro-cantilever based devices, control of
electrostatic microactuators in microelectromechanical
systems (MEMS) and control issues related to
ultrahigh-density probe-based data storage systems.
Professor Moheimani is a Fellow of IEEE, a Fellow of IFAC
and a Fellow of the Institute of Physics (UK). He is a
co-recipient of the 2007 IEEE Transactions on Control
Systems Technology Outstanding Paper Award, and the 2009
IEEE CSS Control Systems Technology Award, together with a
group of researchers from IBM Zurich Research Labs, where
he has held several visiting appointments. He has served
on the editorial board of a number of journals including
the IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology, the
IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics and Control
Engineering Practice, and has chaired several
international conferences and workshops.
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