NANO 8001 Perspectives at the Nanoscale. (2)
NANO program faculty members present and discuss their research in nanoscale
science to: (1) demonstrate how scientists from different disciplines
approach problem-solving at the nanoscale, and (2) expose students to
research opportunities for dissertation work. Students submit for grading
summaries of the presentations.
NANO 8101 Introduction
to Instrumentation and Processing at the Nanoscale. (3)
Methods of manipulating, engineering, and characterizing nanoscale
materials are introduced; applications and principles of their operation
are discussed. Students acquire hands-on experience with selected
laboratory methods in preparation for dissertation research. Topics
include, but are not limited to, scanning probe and electron microscopy
methods, cleanroom technology, nanoscale optical and e-beam lithography,
nuclear magnetic resonance, mass spectrometry, luminescence methods,
interferometry, gel permeation chromatography, surface area analysis,
and small-angle x-ray and neutron scattering.
NANO 8102 Nanoscale
Phenomena. (3)
Topics include, but are not limited to, scaling phenomena; nano-optics
(near-field optics, limits of lithography masks, nano-dots and nanoscale
optical interactions); nanoscale mechanics; nanotribology; biological
and biologically-inspired machines.
NANO 8103 Synthesis
and Characterization of Nanomaterials. (3)
Topics include, but are not limited to, quantum dots, metallic nanoparticles,
carbon nanostructured materials and nanotubes, zeolites, organic-inorganic
polymers, composite materials, solution-phase colloids, sol-gel process,
silica spheres, porous silicon, photonic crystals. Prerequisites:
NANO 8101 and NANO 8102.
ENGR 8104 Fabrication
of Nanomaterials. (3)
Lithographic methods (CVD, PVD, e-beam, ion beam, magnetron, evaporation,
spin coating, mask fabrication, developing resists); microelectromechanical
systems and nanoelectromechanical systems; limits of conventional
mechanical processing, electroforming, growth mechanisms (organic,
inorganic, thermal); powders. Prerequisite: NANO 8101.
NANO 8201 Research Group
Rotations. (1)
Students interact on a regular basis with selected research groups
in nanoscale science from at least three different departments at
UNC Charlotte. Specific activities range from meeting with the group’s
professor and/or other group members, attending group meetings, and
observing laboratory experiments and procedures. Research groups are
chosen so that each student is exposed to an array of research activities
of the Nanoscale Science faculty. At the end of each rotation, the
visiting student delivers a presentation to the visited research group,
describing what the student learned about the visited group’s
research activities.
NANO 8202 Interdisciplinary
Team Project. (2)
An encapsulated, semester-long research experience designed to introduce
students to laboratory work in nanoscale science. Students work, in
interdisciplinary teams of 2-4 students, on a short research project
and present their results during a meeting of the Nanoscale Science
Colloquium. Corequisite: NANO 8682.
NANO 8203 Collaborative
Research Proposal. (3)
Effective strategies for designing and writing research proposals
are presented by program faculty members, and staff from proposal
development offices on campus. Students work in teams of 2-3 to prepare
an original, interdisciplinary research proposal on a topic in nanoscale
science. The proposal conforms to regulations of a selected funding
agency and must address a topic that is supported by that agency.
Each team consults regularly with a panel of 2-3 faculty members who
collectively approve the proposal topic, provide feedback during the
development of the proposal, and ultimately evaluate the proposal.
The course is designed to increase the ability of students to relate
research ideas to fundamental concepts in science and engineering,
to help students learn to develop effective methods of presenting
ideas and defending them, to help students develop self confidence
in their abilities to present and defend ideas, and to improve oral
and written communication skills.
NANO 8681 Nanoscale
Science Seminar. (1)
Students attend weekly seminars of visiting speakers of the Nanoscale
Science program or other approved programs on campus. Seminars are
selected to best meet the educational needs of the individual student.
Students submit for grading summaries of the seminars attended. (May
be repeated for credit.)
NANO 8682 Nanoscale
Science Colloquium. (1)
Students present seminars on current topics in nanoscale science to
the faculty and student participants of the program. Presentations
address dissertation research, the current literature, group projects,
and special topics. The colloquium provides an opportunity for students
to discuss topics in Nanoscale Science with faculty from all of the
participating disciplines. (May be repeated for credit)
ENGR 8104 Fabrication
of Nanomaterials. (3)
Lithographic methods (CVD, PVD, e-beam, ion beam, magnetron, evaporation,
spin coating, mask fabrication, developing resists); microelectromechanical
systems and nanoelectromechanical systems; limits of conventional
mechanical processing, electroforming, growth mechanisms (organic,
inorganic, thermal); powders. Prerequisite: NANO 8101 (Introduction
to Instrumentation and Processing at the Nanoscale).
NANO 8900 Dissertation
Research. (1-4)
Research for the dissertation. (May be repeated for credit).