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    ICSPI

    ICSPI develops and produces easy to use and affordable benchtop AFM instruments designed for the individual scientist and individual lab to capture 3D images at the nanoscale. Incorporating our AFM-on-a-Chip technology, our flagship instrument, the nGauge AFM provides researchers and scientists 3D scans at the nanoscale in about a minute in their own lab and on their own bench. ICSPI is headquartered in Kitchener-Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.

    Redux AFM: Automated Atomic Force Microscope


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    DKSH’s Partner, ICSPI, Launches the Redux AFM to Make the Nanoscale More Accessible Than Ever

    Waterloo, Ontario, Canada – ICSPI, a leader in benchtop nanoscale imaging instruments, announces the launch of its new Redux AFM, an automated atomic force microscope (AFM) designed to allow scientists and engineers to effortlessly collect 3-dimensional data at the nanoscale.

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      • ICSPI - Redux AFM

        ICSPI – Redux AFM

        Effortlessly collect 3D topography data with sub-nanometer precision on your benchtop with the Redux AFM. Get quantitative data in minutes for topography, roughness, film thickness, particle size and more.

        • Precise: Quantitative 3D data with sub-nanometer precision
        • Automated: Motorized X, Y and Z stages for easy sample navigation
        • High throughput: Go from sample loading to data in minutes
        • Versatile: Topography, roughness, thickness, particle size and more
      • ICSPI – Atomic Force Microscope

        ICSPI – Atomic Force Microscope

        Nanoscale Imaging Has Never Been Easier

        Collect nanoscale topography data on your benchtop in three clicks with the nGauge AFM.

        ICSPI has integrated all of the components of a traditional AFM onto a single 1 mm x 1 mm chip to create the world’s first single-chip AFM. That means that 250 AFMs can fit on the face of a penny.

        The nGauge AFM uses micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) to control the X, Y and Z position of the tip. This means that no alignment of lasers is required.

        The nGauge is the smallest AFM in the world. Because the entire unit weighs less than 500 grams, the nGauge rejects building vibrations, so no vibration isolation table is needed, which makes the nGauge a true benchtop AFM.

         

        What can I use AFM for?

        AFM provides topographical data of a surface. That means that you can look at the shape and size of individual features, such as the pits on a DVD, or look at the particle density, such as the number of nanoparticles in an area.

        The nGauge AFM can be used to investigate surfaces where the features are up to 10 µm tall. It’s tricky to pinpoint a lower limit, but the RMS noise in the vertical (z) direction of the nGauge is 1 nanometre (nm). So, depending on your requirements, features as small as 5–10 nm can be imaged with the nGauge with acceptable accuracy.

        To put what a nanometer is into perspective, a quarter (25-cent coin) is about 2 cm wide. An E. coli bacterium cell is 2 µm wide (10,000× smaller than a quarter). And the diameter of a DNA helix is 2 nm (1,000× smaller than a bacterium).

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