The Nanoscale Science and Technology Division (NS) seeks to advance energy frontiers to engineer the future by showcasing developments in nanoscience with a focus on microscopy (electron, ion, and scanning probes), nanofabrication, device characterization, and photonics. We encourage contributions in areas of materials, instrumentation, and theory to access shorter timescales, correlated systems, light-matter interactions, magnetism, and quantum phenomena.
NS1-MoM: Frontier in Nanoscale Electron, Ion, and Scanning Probe Imaging
- Robertus Elbertse, NIST, “Design, Construction, and Performance of a Dilution Refrigerator-Based Esrspm System with Cryogenic Switches”
NS2-MoM: Advanced Nanomaterial for Quantum and Energy Applications
- Michael Titze, Sandia National Laboratories, “Fabricating Color Centers using Liquid Metal Alloy Ion Source Focused Ion Beams “
NS-MoA: Light-Matter Interactions at the Nanoscale
- Archana Raja, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), “Ultrafast and Ultrasmall Characterization of Excitations in Two-Dimensional Heterostructures “
NS1-TuM: AI for Material Discovery and Characterization
- Rama Vasudevan, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, “Advancing Scanning Probe Microscopy as a Tool for Nanoscale Scientific Discovery with AI”
NS2+2D-TuM: Multimodal Techniques in Surface and Interface Engineering at the Nanoscale
- Matthew Rosenberger, University of Notre Dame, “Generalized Defect Quantification of 2D Materials with Atomic Force Microscopy”
NS-TuA: Advanced Nanoscale Materials & Device Technologies
- Farnaz Niroui, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, “Engineering at the Limits of the Nanoscale”
NS-ThP: Nanoscale Science and Technology Poster Session