LABNANO-AMAZON: Primeiro da Amazônia

- Finalidade: dar suporte à comunidade científica e tecnológica brasileira, visando ampliar a pesquisa e a inovação em Nanociência e Nanotecnologia na Região Norte (Amazônia).

- Laboratório multiusuário com sistemas e serviços abertos à comunidade científica e tecnológica brasileira, em particular da Amazônia.

- Missão: atuar como um dos elementos estratégicos nacionais para o avanço científico, tecnológico e de inovação relacionados as propriedades de materiais em nanoescala.

   
Espectrômetro Raman T64000
X-Ray Diffractometer (XRD) - D8 Advance
Microscopia Eletrônica
Microscópio eletrônica de varredura MEV FEG MIRA4
   

Calendário  

Setembro 2019
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Notícias  

Matter & Energy News -- ScienceDaily

Detectors and electronics. Learn about every sort of detector, radar system and more from leading research institutes around the world.
  • Spintronics: A new path to room temperature swirling spin textures
    In some materials, spins form complex magnetic structures within the nanometer and micrometer scale in which the magnetization direction twists and curls along specific directions. Examples of such structures are magnetic bubbles, skyrmions, and magnetic vortices. Spintronics aims to make use of such tiny magnetic structures to store data or perform logic operations with very low power consumption, compared to today's dominant microelectronic components. However, the generation and stabilization of most of these magnetic textures is restricted to a few materials and achievable under very specific conditions (temperature, magnetic field...). Physicists have now investigated a new approach that can be used to create and stabilize complex spin textures, such as radial vortices, in a variety of compounds.
  • A better view with new mid-infrared nanoscopy
    A team has constructed an improved mid-infrared microscope, enabling them to see the structures inside living bacteria at the nanometer scale. Mid-infrared microscopy is typically limited by its low resolution, especially when compared to other microscopy techniques. This latest development produced images at 120 nanometers, which the researchers say is a thirtyfold improvement on the resolution of typical mid-infrared microscopes. Being able to view samples more clearly at this smaller scale can aid multiple fields of research, including into infectious diseases, and opens the way for developing even more accurate mid-infrared-based imaging in the future.
   

  

   
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