Dr Cinzia Casiraghi is a Reader in Graphene and Carbon Nanostructures, in the School of Chemistry, at the University of Manchester, UK. She runs a research group, the Casiraghi Group, which uses Raman spectroscopy to derive quantitative information on the properties and structure of carbon nanostructures.
The Mechanical Engineering Department of the University of Tokyo uses a Renishaw inVia confocal Raman microscope to study graphene and other nano-materials in the development of energy related devices such as solar cells.
projít na článekA Renishaw inVia Raman microscope has been used in new research that addresses one of the major hindrances to the wider exploitation of graphene: the difficulty in growing large defect-free films.
projít na článekThe University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), USA, combines Raman microscopy with scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to study archaeological textiles and fibres. UCLA use a Renishaw SEM-SCA system to study textiles and fibres, non-destructively. The f
projít na článekThe Department of Experimental Physics at the University of Duisburg in Germany uses Renishaw’s inVia confocal Raman microscope to study two dimensional materials such as graphene and molybdenum disulphide.
projít na článekStudy low wavenumber Raman features quickly and easily with Renishaw's Eclipse filters for the inVia Raman microscope; block the laser, not your Raman bands.
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