Automated Nanohandling by Microrobots [electronic resource] /edited by Sergej Fatikow.
by Fatikow, Sergej [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type:
Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
MAIN LIBRARY | Available |
Browsing MAIN LIBRARY Shelves Close shelf browser
TA1637-1638 Bézier and Splines in Image Processing and Machine Vision | QA299.6-433 Sturm-Liouville Theory and its Applications | TJ212-225 Robot Motion and Control 2007 | Automated Nanohandling by Microrobots | RD701-811 Psychoprosthetics | Q334-342 Advances in Applied Self-organizing Systems | P98-98.5 Mathematical Linguistics |
Trends in Nanohandling -- Robot-based Automated Nanohandling -- Learning Controller for Microrobots -- Real-time Object Tracking Inside an SEM -- 3D Imaging System for SEM -- Force Feedback for Nanohandling -- Characterization and Handling of Carbon Nanotubes -- Characterization and Handling of Biological Cells -- Material Nanotesting -- Nanostructuring and Nanobonding by EBiD.
The rapid development of nanotechnology has created a need for advanced nanohandling tools and techniques. One active branch of research in this area focuses on the use of microrobots for automated handling of micro- and nanoscale objects. Automated Nanohandling by Microrobots presents work on the development of a versatile microrobot-based nanohandling robot station inside a scanning electron microscope (SEM). The SEM serves as a powerful vision sensor, providing a high resolution and a high depth of focus, allowing different fields of application to be opened up. The pre-conditions for using a SEM are high-precision, user-friendly microrobots which can be integrated into the SEM chamber and equipped with application-specific tools. Automated Nanohandling by Microrobots introduces an actuation principle for such microrobots and presents a new robot design. Different aspects of this research field regarding the hardware and software implementation of the system components, including the sensory feedback for automated nanohandling, are discussed in detail. Extensive applications of the microrobot station for nanohandling, nano-characterization and nanostructuring are provided, together with the experimental results. Based upon the Microrobotics course for students of computer sciences and physics at the University of Oldenburg, Automated Nanohandling by Microrobots provides the practicing engineer and the engineering student with an introduction to the design and applications of robot-based nanohandling devices. Those unfamiliar with the subject will find the text, which is complemented throughout by the extensive use of illustrations, clear and simple to understand.
There are no comments for this item.