Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Postgrad Conference, School of Materials, The University of Manchester, 2009

There will be a postgraduate conference, of School of Materials, The University of Manchester.

My presentation will be at 11 in the morning, on Friday, 22 May, 2009, in room H06, the Renold Building, The University of Manchester, Manchester.

I will cover the area of generation of metal-oxide nanoparticles by continuous-wave laser ablation in liquid. This will be my last presentation at the school and will be covering nearly my all PhD work.

Addition to that there is a first school of materials photography competition is going on and the results will be announced soon.

More about the conference and photography competition:
http://www.pg-conference-materials.co.uk/

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Conference on Laser Ablation and Nanoparticle Generation in Liquids (ANGEL 2010)

Location: Engelberg, Switzerland
Duration: 29 June 2010 - 30 June 2010
Submission Timeframe: 1 February 2010 - 26 February 2010

Today, nanoparticles are widely implemented as functional elements in plastics, lacquers and ceramic products. Novel applications are targeted on nanomedicine, sensing, electronics, optics and biophotonics.

Nowadays, however, only a limited variety of materials that may be integrated into advanced functional materials are available: Nanoparticles synthesized by conventional gas phase processes are agglomerated to micro powders that are hardly redispersible into functional matrices, and chemical methods often lead to impurities of the nanoparticle colloids caused by additives and precursor reaction products.

In the last decade, laser ablation in liquids has proven to be a unique and efficient technique to generate, fragmentate, re-shape and conjugate nanoparticles. This exciting method bears strong advantages:

  • Laser-generated (metal) nanoparticles are charged and thus have an extremely high stability
  • Nanoparticle colloids are not inhalable and thus lead to an improved occupational safety
  • Chemical precursors are not required and thus the colloids are 100 percent pure
  • This method can be applied universally with an almost unlimited variety of materials and solvents
Aspects of the fundamental physics of laser ablation in liquids as well as novel applications, such as the fabrication of core-shell particles, nano-alloys or laser ablation of nanoparticles in biological surroundings will be addressed in this conference. Moreover, the processes of laser nanoparticle interaction within liquid environments provide a large spectrum of applications, especially in biophotonics.

The latest findings on appropriate focusing conditions, cross-effects with particle-laser interaction, flow conditions, kinetics etc. will be discussed on an international level with enough time for discussions and an informal exchange of ideas.

http://www.myeos.org/angel2010