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Today Bruker Nano Surfaces Division announced the innovative and unique Dimension FastScan AFM, which delivers a significant breakthrough in improved imaging speed without sacrificing nanoscale resolution. The Dimension FastScan enables users to obtain usable data significantly faster than is possible...
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Posted to
Webinars and Video
on Fri, Sep 17 2010
Filed under: TappingMode, Video, Closed-Loop System, Edge, AFM, Atomic Force Microscope, Dimension Edge, 3D characterization, MFM
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Atomic force microscopy (AFM) provides the ability to perform three-dimensional measurements of surface structures at nanometer-to-subangstrom resolution in ambient and liquid environments. These capabilities have led to ground-breaking life sciences advances in the investigation of DNA, proteins, and...
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The human tooth has two main calcified parts with quite different mechanical properties. The enamel is hard and brittle, while the dentin is tough, and can absorb and distribute stress. Enamel and dentin meet at the dentino-enamel junction (DEJ). What is the nanometer-scale anatomy of tooth dentin, enamel...
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Normal 0 false false false MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 TappingModeTM imaging has proved to be the most versatile mode of atomic force microscopy (AFM) in ambient conditions where the presence of a fluid layer (condensed water vapor and other contaminants) severely limits the applicability of both, contact...
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In addition to its high resolution imaging capabilities, atomic force microscopy (AFM) has emerged as a powerful tool for measuring both the nanomechanical properties and interaction forces of biomolecular complexes. While the majority of these types of AFM studies have been conducted on isolated molecules...
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Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) operates by scanning a sharp tip, supported on a sensitive force-sensing cantilever, over the sample and thereby producing a three-dimensional image of the surface. As the tip scans across the samples, changes in the interactions with the surface alter the vertical deflection...
Posted to
Application Notes
by
BrukerApplications
on Mon, Jan 4 2010
Filed under: TappingMode, BioScope II, AFM, Neurodegenerative Diseases, Fluorescence Microscopy, Huntington’s Disease