-
The Center for Nanoscale Materials (CNM) at Argonne National Laboratory is seeking an exceptional Postdoctoral Researcher to join the Electron & X-ray Microscopy Group in a core position within the
-
from academia, national laboratories and industry on advanced synchrotron X-ray, electron microscopy characterization, interfacial analysis, and full-cell prototyping. Position Requirements Recent
-
are seeking an postdoctoral appointee to contribute to this research to understand the underlying physics of spin and charge based memory materials using advanced in-situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM
-
. Experience using analytical tools, such as particle size analyzer, X-Ray diffraction, electron microscopy (SEM and TEM), spectroscopy (FTIR and Raman), surface area analysis, and electrochemical (EIS and RDE
-
ultrafast science. Considerable experience in experimental research of materials physics systems using advanced optical, x-ray spectroscopy or electron microscopy techniques. Experience in the development
-
. High-resolution tomographic measurements at a synchrotron facility aim to complement electron microscopy measurements. Research will be conducted at 2-BM, a fast micro-tomography beamline. Achieving sub
-
for developing new computational tools and AI/ML approaches to analyze and correlate data from multiple imaging modalities, including synchrotron tomography, x-ray fluorescence microscopy, visible light microscopy
-
with other semiconductor materials. The studies will involve fabrication of heterojunction devices as well as detail characterization of the interface using various spectroscopy and microscopy techniques
-
. Experience writing successful proposals for synchrotron experimental beam time at large scale facilities. Materials characterization with electron microscopy, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and optical
-
of interfacial science and crystallography Considerable experience in synchrotron X-ray scattering experiments and the state-of-the-art microscopies (such as atomic force or electron microscopies