Etching tiny Benny Beaver
While it's not the smallest ever created, newest Beaver logo is smallest created at Oregon State
Daniel Acee
Issue date: 5/2/08 Section: News
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Etched onto a 1x1 inch section of a compact disk, the logo would be extremely difficult to locate. After some quick calculations, team members say it would be similar to finding a quarter on a football field.
Ethan Minot, assistant professor, is leading this group through the research on carbon nanoelectronics field.
Minot earned his undergrad degree in his home country of New Zealand, and a Ph. D in physics at Cornell University in New York.
Minot came to Oregon for the lifestyle and to be a part of the young physics department at OSU. He believes through his research he will play an important role in making this department a success.
Minot's team consists of four graduate students and three undergraduate students. One of his graduate students is on exchange from Germany for the year.
Jörg Borchterle's research at OSU will help him earn a Diplom, which is comparable to masters degree in the US.
"This is a really great team, we have great communication," Borchterle said. "I am not just a foreigner to them [the project team], I am included in everything, not just someone to entertain a year."
Nanoelectronics will be used to build electronic devices as small as a molecule. The fighting beaver logo is composed of a series of lines that are 10 nanometers wide.
Minot clarified these dimensions with an example most people can relate to.
"It's important to realize that the beaver is the size of a red blood cell, and the lines in the image are about 10 molecules wide," Minot said.
The fighting beaver image was a test run that the team did to show control of the atomic force microscope (AFM), the tool used to view and create their devices.
"What Jörg did with the tiny beaver is similar to an artist making an etching," Minot said.
Experiencing success with the beaver image, Minot's team is now developing electronic chips.
Minot explained that the AFM is similar to a record player in that it follows contours of surfaces similar to a record player needle moving through ridges (in this case, creating the ridges) on a vinyl record.
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