Electronic & Magnetic Nanoscale Composite Multifunctional Materials

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ENCOMM Seminar:
Friday November 20th 4:00 pm  in PRB 4138
Jay Gupta, Physics
"Studies of transport through single molecules with atomically precise contacts"

IMR Shuttle Information


OSU Wins Its First
NSF Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC)

Called the Center for Emergent Materials (CEM). Winning prestigious, block-funded centers such as the MRSEC is at the heart of ENCOMM's mission. Both of the MRSEC IRG's emerged from the ENCOMM—a testament to the efficacy of ENCOMM's team-building approach to winning center funding ... read more here.

NSF Press Release:   NSF Awards 14 Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers


New Functionality Through Nanoscale Hybrid and Composite Materials

The Center for Electronic/Magnetic Nanoscale Composite Multifunctional Materials (ENCOMM) is a University funded Initiative that builds on the broad strength at OSU in electronic, magnetic and organic materials to address cutting edge challenges in understanding and developing complex multicomponent materials. These problems are inherently multidisciplinary and require state-of-the-art facilities. ENCOMM's mission is to create the environment in which these teams can form and interact, and to provide the infrastructure needed to perform the research that will define this field.

The growth in our ability to fabricate, manipulate, characterize, understand and model multicomponent solids comprised of dissimilar materials and with complex structures is ushering in a new era for materials with advanced functionality and exceptional levels of performance. Fashioning such hybrid materials with nanometer-scale precision opens a new frontier for conception and implementation of new devices with a vast range of capabilities. Early successes along these lines include mixing metals and magnets to form "spintronics" read heads that enabled a million-fold increase in information storage capacity of computer hard drives, complex materials architectures to form photovoltaic devices that capture sunlight, transistors made of nanometer scale "nanowires" or single molecules for ultradense information storage, remarkable sensitivity to magnetic fields and coupling of electric to magnetic responses in complex transition metal oxides, to electronics and photonics made from large area inexpensive plastic sheets. Control at the nano scale (a few atoms or molecules thick) of the arrangement of atoms and molecules both in the plane of the interface between dissimilar material and perpendicular to it enables the essential transfer of electrons, spins and photons (the quanta for electronics, magnetism and light, respectively). The exquisite degree of control now achievable using sophisticated physical and chemical growth processes, is opening new avenues to engineer transport properties at interfaces and to manipulate interactions between device components to achieve new functionality for information processing, energy generation from sunlight, light generation from electricity, light weight high density information storage, sophisticated sensors for homeland security, and entirely new classical and quantum approaches to computing and communication.

Chris Hammel
Director, Center for Electronic & Magnetic Nanoscale Composite Multifunctional Materials (an OSU Initiative)
Ohio Eminent Scholar


ENCOMM Members in the News


OSU Team Wins NSF MRI Competition A team of OSU researchers has won an NSF Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) award for the acquisition of a hybrid diamond/nitride synthesis cluster tool for studies of wide bandgap semiconductors. The team of researchers spans two colleges and three departments including Physics (Prof. Ezekiel Johnston-Halperin, CME, PI on the proposal; Prof. Fengyuan Yang, CME; Prof. Harris Kagan, HEPX), Electrical and Computer Engineering (Prof. Siddharth Rajan; Prof. Steven A. Ringel) and Materials Science and Engineering (Prof. Roberto Myers). read more here
Chris Hammel recently published an article in Nature magazine titled "Imaging: Nanoscale MRI"
Congratulations to ENCOMM researcher Julia Meyer for receiving an award from the physics graduate student body recognizing her outstanding teaching of the core curriculum at The Ohio State University in 2007-2008. <
ENCOMM researcher Nitin Padture was awarded the AcerS 2007 Richard M. Fulrath Award. This award is presented to outstanding academics and industrial ceramic engineers/scientists... Read more here
Nano Mania Ohio State researchers create high-tech surfaces
ENCOMM researcher Jay Gupta receives a Beckman Foundation Young Investigator Award which supports the study of chemical reactivity at the single molecule level.
Congratulations to ENCOMM researcher Jay Gupta for receiving an NSF CAREER award supporting research into the electronic and optical properties of nanostructures. here
ENCOMM scientist Ezekiel Johnston-Halperin and his cutting edge nanoscale research is featured on the IMR webpage.
Ohio State University chemists, including ENCOMM'S Malcolm Chisholm, have devised a new way to create tiny molecular rings that could one day function as drug delivery devices. Read more here.
Distinguished University Professor of Physics and Chemistry and ENCOMM member Arthur J. Epstein has been awarded the 2007 James C. McGroddy Prize for New Materials in association with Dr. Joel S. Miller from University of Utah for their discovery and characterization of organic-based magnets. ... Read more here.
ENCOMM Wins TIE Funding in partnership with IMR, MCDSM and the WCI-CMPMD. The Targeted Investments in Excellence awards have been announced and the Advanced Materials Initiative has been awarded 9.6M$ to build upon OSU's success in materials research to create an internationally known program that can have a direct and real impact on the state's economy. Read more here.

   
   
 

This page last modified on September 29, 2009.