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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!rutgers!igor.rutgers.edu!planchet.rutgers.edu!nanotech
- From: landman@hal.com (Howard Landman)
- Newsgroups: sci.nanotech
- Subject: Re: Homebrewed STM
- Message-ID: <Jan.11.23.59.20.1993.24049@planchet.rutgers.edu>
- Date: 12 Jan 93 04:59:21 GMT
- Sender: nanotech@planchet.rutgers.edu
- Organization: HaL Computer Systems, Inc.
- Lines: 35
- Approved: nanotech@aramis.rutgers.edu
-
- In article <Jan.4.22.43.27.1993.8155@planchet.rutgers.edu> gbloom@nyx.cs.du.edu (Gregory Bloom) writes:
- >How hard is it to build an STM or AFM? Does it seem like a project
- >that could be made on the scale of 'The Amateur Scientist' series
- >from Scientific American?
-
- JoSH replies:
- >[Homebrew STM's are a definite possibility; the only one I've personally
- > seen built was done by a couple of grad students in a lab here at
- > Rutgers, though.
-
- If I recall correctly, a year or two ago a high school student near
- Stanford built one for his Science Fair project. He used about $100
- in parts. The scan circuitry was scavenged from a discarded TV, so he
- only had one scan rate available, but it was TV-compatible so he could
- use an ordinary TV set for display.
-
- STMs are therefore "easy" in some sense. It would have been possible to
- build one in the 1930s, if anyone had thought to do it. You would have
- had to use vacuum tubes for all the control, of course, but so what?
-
- Be creative! You might even come up with a better way of doing things
- than anyone else! This is still a young field.
-
- >I have heard that getting the monatomic tipped probe
- >is perhaps the hardest part.
-
- One normal procedure for making tips, for a while, was to hold a piece of
- wire against a belt sander. Some reasonable fraction of the time this
- gives you a good probe tip, and if it doesn't you can just try again.
-
- Probe tips tend to become unusable fairly quickly (MTBF of hours at best),
- so you need to have a way to get more inexpensively. The most common failure
- mechanisms are "head crashes" and the simple accumulation of "dirt".
-
- Howard A. Landman
-