Seventh International Conference on Non-contact Atomic Force
Microscopy, 12-15 September 2004, Seattle, USA
Update as 5 August 2005: ncAFM05 is
planned for Germany during the week of August 14-20, 2005.
ncAFM06 is
planned for Japan in July 2006. The ncAFM04 proceedings now
appear in Nanotechnology,
Volume 16, Number 3 (March 2005).
All information below is from 11
September 2004 and earlier.
Bus information and trip planner
Note: exact change is required on all
buses
SUNDAY
AFTERNOON PRECONFERENCE WORKSHOP: Atomic resolution images and
quantitative information about electrically insulating surfaces can be
obtained by non-contact atomic force microscopy (ncAFM) in vacuum or
liquid environments. A 3.5 to 4 hour short course for investigators new
to this technique will consist of three tutorial lectures by prominent
scientists in this area who are also excellent teachers: Prof. Ruben
Perez (Madrid, Spain) on theoretical aspects of AFM including in vacuum
ncAFM; Prof. Franz Giessibl (Augsberg, Germany) on experimental aspects
of AFM including in vacuum ncAFM; and Prof. Heinrich Hoerber (Detroit,
Michigan) on AFM in liquids. Attendees should have had a course in
quantum physics or physical chemistry and be familiar with the idea of
the resonance of a forced driven harmonic oscillator. Suggested
preworkshop reading from the workshop
instructors is: F. Giessibl, Revs. Mod. Phys. 75, 949 (2003) ; R.
Garcia and R. Perez, Surface Science Reports 47, 197 (2002); and H.
Hoerber and M. J. Miles, Science 302, 1002 (2003). The cost for this
short course is only $60. It is not necessary to register for the
conference to attend this course, but it is necessary to register to
attend the short course (see online
registration
form).
OPTIONAL WORKSHOP STARTS PROMPTLY AT 1 PM SUNDAY in PAA A110
NOTE NEW TIME FOR OPTIONAL
EXCURSION: WE PLAN TO LEAVE FROM
UNIVERSITY INN ON SUNDAY 12 SEPT AT 10:30 AM per email send to those
signed up; SEE MAP FOR
GENERAL LOCATION OF HOTELS,
EATERIES, PARKING, and PHYSICS-ASTRONOMY. Printable detailed campus map
(1.9 Mb pdf file). ncAFM04 information on Campus
walks on your own (1.1 Mb
pdf file). Link to information on
9/11 exhibits in libraries. Link to information about Campus
eateries.
REGISTRATION OPENS NOON SUNDAY 12 SEPT and 8 AM MON-WED AT PHYSICS-ASTRONOMY AUDITORIUM LOBBY;
RECEPTION
IS AT 5-7 PM SUNDAY EVENING IN LOBBY; CONFERENCE STARTS MONDAY 13 SEPT
PROMPTLY AT 9
AM in PAA A102. There will be
wireless internet access in A102 and some areas of the lobby.
Speakers who wish to use a computer and projector for giving their
talks need to be sure to prepare a cd-rom as backup in Microsoft
Powerpoint or Adobe pdf format even if they want to use their own
computers. Computers for each session need to connected to VGA video
projector switch and tested during the 40 minutes before that session.
Contributed oral presentations need to be planned carefully for 16
minutes with 4 minutes for discussion; in no case will more than 20
minutes be allocated per contributed talk. Invited talks are limited to
40 minutes including discussion.
Poster presentations must fit within an area of 1.10 meter wide by 1.10
meter high. The poster needs to be posted on the appropriate display
board by 5 PM on the day of presentation and removed by Noon on the
next day. Poster presentations will be held on Monday and Tuesday
evenings. Poster boards will be setup Monday morning.
Contributions by presenters to the conference proceedings are due by 1
October; full information is below.
PROGRAM INFORMATION. There are some small
changes to the program that are not yet shown on online
preliminary conference
program Summary of invited speakers is below. A 330 Kb
pdf of the first pages of the conference
abstract booklet as well as the very large (circa 16 Mb) pdf of the booklet
including abstracts are available for downloading. The
program will be printed in black and white.
A schematic
drawing showing the location of the lecture hall, refreshments
area, sponsor information area, and poster area for ncAFM04 is posted. Information for sponsors. Photos looking toward lecture hall and looking towards poster area.
From 24 May 2004 Update: We are pleased
to announce that Heinrich Horber (inventor of photonic force
microscope) has agreed to be the third instructor
at the optional
preconference
workshop on Sunday afternoon, Christian Loppacher has agreed to be the
fifth invited
speaker at the conference, and Udo Schwarz has agreed to be the guest
editor for the
proceedings to be published in Nanotechnology.
CONFERENCE PROGRAM: The
on line
preliminary scientific
program includes invited and
contributed talks during the day on Monday through Wednesday as well as
poster presentations on Monday and Tuesday
evenings. Invited speakers
are: Oscar Custance, Osaka, Japan, "Using Non-contact Atomic
Force Microscopy for
Laterally Manipulating Single Atoms at Semiconductor Surfaces"; Suzanne
Jarvis, Dublin, Ireland, "The Measurement of Water Structure with
Application to Biological Systems"; Khaled Karrai, Munich, Germany,
"Optically Tunable Mechanics of Microlevers"; John Sader, Melbourne,
Australia, "Dynamic Force Spectroscopy in Vacuum and Fluids:
Theoretical Considerations"; and Christian Loppacher of Dresden,
Germany,
"Quantitative Surface Potential Tracking of Organic Adsorbates." The
conference banquet
will be held Wednesday evening and is
included in the registration fee.
VISAS: It is
important
for those requiring a visa to
attend the conference to apply for a visa at least 3 to 4 months in
advance
as detailed at http://www7.nationalacademies.org/visas/Traveling_to_US.html Please check that site periodically for updated
information.
SUBMISSIONS TO PROCEEDINGS:
Article submissions for the
NC-AFM2004 special issue of
the journal Nanotechnology
(ncAFM2003 was published in Feb 2004 issue)
will be handled on line; see information
about submitting manuscripts.
Those submitting articles will need to hand in a copy of the Article
Submission Form (version in
Microsoft Word) to the Guest Editor Udo Schwarz at the conference
and
send an electronic file of your
paper together with an Assignment of Copyright Form and a copy of
Article Submission Form directly to IOPP as outlined in the document on
the website. Submission deadline for manuscripts is 1 October
2004.
Applicants for
travel assistance from
funds provided to the conference by the USA National Science Foundation
have been notified. (Recipients must comply with the NSF Guidelines
for foreign travel. )
We look
forward to
welcoming
you
to
Seattle.
BACKGROUND
INFORMATION: Noncontact Atomic
Force Microscopy (ncAFM) is currently the only technique to obtain
atomic resolution topographical images of clean, insulating surfaces in
ultrahigh vacuum. This information is vital to future exploitation of
these materials in nanotechnology. In addition ncAFM also reveals
structural information about semiconductor surfaces complementary to
that obtained by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM). The first results
about atomic manipulations required for conducting wire
formation on insulating surfaces are being reported with ncAFM for
semiconductor surfaces. The technique also has widespread application
in detecting magnetic and electrical forces in vacuum, including
the developing techniques of magnetic resonance force microscopy, as
well as topographical measurements with minimal forces in air and
fluids. This
continues
the series of international conferences that has been held in Osaka,
Japan (1998); Pontresina, Switzerland (1999); Hamburg, Germany (2000);
Kyoto, Japan (2001); Montreal, Canada (2002); and Dingle,
Ireland(2003). The first meeting of this conference in USA will be in
Seattle on
12-15 September 2004.
Topics of the
conference include:
1.
Instrumentation and techniques for non-contact AFM:
2. Non-contact AFM with true atomic resolution
3. Analysis/simulation of contrast mechanisms
4. Theory of non-contact AFM
5. Measurement of tip-sample interaction potential
6. Damping and dissipation mechanisms
7. Small amplitude techniques
8. Tapping vs. non-contact mode
9. Operation in liquid environments
10. Application to insulators, semiconductors and metals
11. Application to organic, molecular and biological materials
12. Application to magnetism, ferroelectricity and Kelvin Probe
13. 3-D mapping of atomic force with true atomic resolution
14. Modification of tip apex atom to control atomic force
15. Relation of ncAFM to Atomic Manipulation and STM
The International Steering Committee consists
of Christoph Gerber, IBM Zurich, Switzerland; Sam Fain, U.
Washington, USA; Franz Giessibl, U. of Augsburg, Germany; Peter
Grutter, McGill U., Canada; Ernst Meyer , U. Basel, Switzerland;
Seizo Morita, Osaka U., Japan; John Pethica, Trinity College, Ireland;
Michael Reichling, Universitaet
Osnabrueck,
Germany; Alexander Schwarz,
U. Hamburg, Germany; Udo Schwarz, Yale U., USA; Alex Shluger,
U.
College London, U.K.; Geoff Thornton, U. College, London, U.K.; Masaru
Tsukada, U. Tokyo, Japan.
The Program Committee consists of Sam Fain, U.
Washington, USA (chair of committee); Peter Grutter, McGill University,
Canada; Peter Hoffmann, Wayne State University, USA; Suzi Jarvis,
Trinity College Dublin, Ireland; Hiroshi Onishi, Kobe University,
Japan; Ruben Perez, Universidad
Autonoma de Madrid, Spain; Michael Reichling, Universitaet Osnabrueck ,
Germany; Udo Schwarz, Yale University, USA.
The conference to be held in Seattle 12-15
September 2004 is being organized by a local committee led by Prof.
Sam Fain. Other members of the local committee include Prof. Charles
Campbell,
Prof. Fumio Ohuchi, Prof. Marjorie Olmstead,
and Dr. Qiuming Yu.
This site was updated 5
August 2005.
(This material is based upon work supported by the National Science
Foundation under Grant No. 0355441. Any opinions, findings, and
conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of
the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National
Science Foundation.)