Nanoelectronics and Nanotechnology research within the School is very active in the areas of liquid exfoliation of van der Waals bonded nanomaterials, such as carbon nanotubes, graphene and inorganic layered compounds, and on optically active nanostructures and polymers as well as nanocarbon composites.
Interdisciplinary nanomechanics, nanofabrication and soft-matter physics are pursued in a programme of understanding the rheological and tribological issues underlying massively parallel nanostructure fabrication by mechanical forming of soft condensed matter systems.
Transport and associated magneto-optical phenomena in low-dimensional inorganic and organic/molecular nanostructured materials and single nano-objects with and without magnetic fields and at varying temperatures are investigated. Surface physics and interface physics target the photoelectron spectroscopy of semiconductors using synchrotron radiation and epioptics to probe anisotropic nanostructures grown by self-assembly including quasi-one-dimensional behaviour in non-magnetic and magnetic nanowires.
Electronic structure and chemical bonding are investigated using resonant x-ray emission spectroscopy and x-ray absorption spectroscopy and the magnetic behaviour of low-dimensional atomic nanowires by x-ray magnetic circular dichroism. New ultramicroscopy methodologies for nanoscale characterization, machinery, and metrology are being developed at the AML centre.
Our research groups are listed below:
Prof. Igor Shvets
Prof. Graham Cross
Prof. David McCloskey
Prof. Cormac McGuinness
Prof. Jonathan Coleman
Prof. Lewys Jones