Scanning

Recent Applications of Scanning Microscopy in Surface Engineering 2020


Publishing date
01 Dec 2020
Status
Published
Submission deadline
31 Jul 2020

Lead Editor

1Hohai University, Nanjing, China

2City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

3National Institute for Lasers, Plasma and Radiation Physics, Ilfov, Romania

4Kwangwoon University, Seoul, Republic of Korea

5Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology - Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen, China


Recent Applications of Scanning Microscopy in Surface Engineering 2020

Description

Scanning microscopy has been greatly developed and widely used in the past 80 years and is currently playing an important role in exploring the microscopic world. Generally speaking, scanning microscopy has developed in two directions: scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and scanning probe microscopy (SPM). Scanning electron microscopy has already become a general analytical tool to observe the surface morphology of various matters since it was invented in the 1930s. SEM allows scientists and engineers to not only study viruses and DNA but also build micro-circuits on computer chips. Scanning probe microscopy was subsequently developed in the 1980s to investigate surfaces with atomic resolution. SPM can serve scientists and engineers observing individual atoms and manipulating them to build new structures with novel properties.

Surface engineering is a multidisciplinary field that combines physics, chemistry, materials science, biology, and mechanical engineering. Metals, polymers, and ceramics can achieve novel properties via various surface modification techniques such as electrochemical deposition, laser cladding, plasma treatment, etc. Comprehensive and simultaneous information can be acquired via scanning microscopy to reveal the fundamental aspects of physics, chemistry, and biology at surfaces. Thus, the utilization of scanning microscopy in surface engineering provides many opportunities to improve current surface modification processes and understand the associated mechanisms.

The aim of this Special Issue is to provide an excellent platform for physicists, chemists, biologists, materials scientists, and engineers to share and disseminate recent applications of scanning microscopy in surface engineering. This issue welcomes both experimental and theoretical studies and accepts high quality articles containing original research articles as well as review articles.

Potential topics include but are not limited to the following:

  • Corrosion, oxidation, and wear phenomena at surfaces of engineering materials
  • Interactions between biomaterials and their outside environments (including in vitro and in vivo investigations)
  • Surface design of nanomaterials related to photochemical catalysis, pollution remediation, and energy storage and conversion
  • Synthesis, characterization, and applications of thin solid films
  • Fabrication of functional surfaces on engineering materials

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