Oxford TEM Access
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Oxford
Department Name: Materials
Abstract
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is a key tool in a wide range of research discoplines, including Materials, Physics, Chemistry and Engineering. The instruments are often expensive (over 1 million), and they require expertise to operate them well and to interpret the data.The Department of Materials at the University of Oxford has been an international leader in this field for decades. It has over 15 instruments, several of which are state-of-the-art; it has academic staff who are leaders in the field; it has staff dedicated 100% of their time to supporting users of the instruments; it has extensive ancilliary equipment (sample preparation facilities, data interpretation software); and it has well-developed training modules.All of these facilities and support will be made available to approved UK users through this Access initiative of the EPSRC.
Organisations
Publications
Ilie A
(2012)
Repair and stabilization in confined nanoscale systems - inorganic nanowires within single-walled carbon nanotubes
in Nano Research
Goodall JB
(2015)
Structure-property-composition relationships in doped zinc oxides: enhanced photocatalytic activity with rare earth dopants.
in ACS combinatorial science
Taniguchi S
(2011)
The room-temperature structural and optical transformation of cadmium chalcogenide quantum dots triggered by reactive cations
in Journal of Materials Chemistry
Taniguchi S
(2011)
The Room-Temperature Synthesis of Anisotropic CdHgTe Quantum Dot Alloys: A "Molecular Welding" Effect
in Journal of the American Chemical Society
Gruar R
(2010)
Tunable and rapid crystallisation of phase pure Bi2MoO6 (koechlinite) and Bi2Mo3O12 via continuous hydrothermal synthesis
in Solid State Sciences