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AFM Lab Usage Guidelines
The Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) Laboratory will be open to
qualified users for imaging the topography of surfaces at the sub-100
micron scale. Undergraduates and graduate students qualify by passing
the Atomic Force Microscopy courses. Students typically
become
competent in AFM techniques in approximately one semester, although it
takes about a year of constant work to evolve into a fully independent
user. One should not expect research results quickly. Thus for me to
train
a student requires a solid commitment to the project on the part of
that
student's advisor. All users must follow the written Laboratory Procedures. I control who has
access to the lab.
Expectations of AFM Lab Users
All users:
I would like to meet (as a group) with
all of the lab users the day before the start of A, B, C, and D terms during the academic year, nominally from 4:00-6:00 pm. I
realize that this
can be challenging due to diverse schedules, but I think that it is
important for ensuring good communication within the group. We might meet twice over the summer as well.
When you reserve instrument time, I expect that
you will make full use of it. You may
request
additional time beyond your reservation limits depending on the
fluctuating
needs of your project.
If you are of my project students:
In addition to the four lab users meetings the day before each term, I want
to see you individually for one hour a week.
If you are an undergraduate:
In order to use the AFM Lab independently, you must first
pass the Atomic Force Microscopy course, PH 2510, offered in alternating D terms.
I expect you to:
- become familar with the existing literature,
- generate repeatable, well-documented,
publishable data, and
- describe your project with a
presentation, report, and poster.
If you are a graduate student or a postdoc:
Graduate
students may enroll in Atomic Force Microscopy, PH 2510, offered in
alternating D terms. This year, in the Spring of 2008, I will offer a
graduate version of the AFM course, PH 597. In order to use the AFM Lab
independently, you must first
pass one of the courses.
I expect Master's students to:
- contribute to the design of
their experiments,
- perform literature searches
and learn the existing literature,
- generate repeatable,
well-documented, publishable data,
- describe their projects with
presentations, theses, posters, and publications at a professional
level, and
- mentor less experienced
students in laboratory skills.
I expect Ph.D. candidates to:
- contribute to their research
directions,
- perform literature searches,
learn the existing literature, and keep the group abreast of the field,
- generate repeatable,
well-documented, publishable data,
- describe their projects with
presentations, theses, posters, and publications at a professional
level with little guidance from their advisors, and
- mentor less experienced
students in laboratory and communication skills.
I expect postdocs to:
- provide the initiative for
their research,
- perform literature searches,
learn the existing literature, and keep the group abreast of the field,
- generate repeatable,
well-documented, publishable data,
- describe their projects with
presentations, theses, posters, and publications at a professional
level with minimal guidance from their advisors,
- help prepare proposals for
submission to external funding agencies, and
- mentor less experienced
students in all aspects of research.
If you are a WPI professor:
If your project calls for sporadic AFM use, too
little for the semester required to train one of your graduate
students, or for the term required for an undergraduate to take my AFM
course, I would be glad to have a trained student help you one time for
half a day. Because of limited time and personnel, additional sessions
would be handled on a fee basis, which would be 60$/hr plus
consumables,
if we can accommodate your request. (The consumables, cantilevers, cost
8$ to 220$ each, and you may use several in a day. The MIT AFM Lab
charges
a similar rate. For comparison, commercial rates are 300$/hr.)
If your project calls for consistent AFM use, you must have one of your
students
trained by me before they may use the lab. Then, depending on how well
the
project is aligned with my own interests, the lab reservation fee
ranges
from $30/hr to free. As of Spring 2007, there is still room in the weekly
schedule
to accomodate other projects.
If you are external to WPI and need some AFM service work done:
Call me to discuss the project
and possible arrangements.
Prof NA Burnham
WPI Physics
100 Institute Road
Worcester MA 01609-2280 USA
(508)831-5365
nab@wpi.edu
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nab@wpi.edu
Last modified: June 2007
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