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Lead Atoms Imaged During Phase Change

fsh writes "José Gómez-Rodríguez and company from the Madrid Autonomous University have successfully imaged the phase change of a lead crystal from 45K to 135K. They built their very own variable temperature scanning-tunneling microscope, capable of continuously scanning an area 20nm square throughout a 100K temperature jump. This was a surface phase change, but their technique will hopefully pave the way for imaging other phase changes, like solid to liquid. Check out the movie."

3 of 24 comments (clear)

  1. Just wondering what applications this has? by Admiral+Ackbar+8 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I did some searching, but couldn't find any meaningful applications for this. I am not saying science for the sake of science is not meaningful, but I was just curious what we could use this for. If anyone can enlighten me I would be much obliged.

  2. friggin awesome! by ianmakesbeer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well, I can think of many reasons why this is quite amazing:

    -The field of view is a mere 400nm^2
    -We are watching a phase transition happen at the atomic level
    -Its the first time this has ever been done
    -(corallary: the stable viewpoint of the "camera" during this process is a first as well)
    -Could have applications in thermodynamics, nanotechnology, bio-engineering, etc. etc.

    Myself, I find this fascinating.

    --
    i can't think of a witty signature, so i won't try.
  3. Crystal phase change? by Democritus+the+Minor · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm really intrigued by the temperature-induced crystal structure change. Never really thought about that possibility.