Arthur R. Smith, Associate Professor

Physics & Astronomy Department

Ohio University, Athens, OH  45701
 
Art with Lab 151 MBE/STM System
photo courtesy of Rick Fatica


Go back to:  Department of Physics and Astronomy Ohio University

Hot Stuff:  STM Image of GaN Spiral Growth Region on the Cover of Science Magazine



Awards



Research News
Articles published by
Ohio University Research Communications
Vice President for Research

  1. Receiving the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers at the White House

  2. Regarding our First Paper on Spin-Polarized STM Published in Physical Review Letters

  3. Ohio University's Nanoscale and Quantum Phenomena Institute Members Attend Ohio Nanotechnology Summit in Force

  4. Regarding the Acquisition of Funds for the Purpose of Constructing a New Microscope/Epitaxial Growth System

  5. New - Fall 2007 PIRE!! Award




Research
My research interests include the following: 1) growth and investigation of novel semiconductor surfaces using RHEED, MBE, and STM 2) growth and study of metals and magnetic structures 3) investigation of magnetic surface structure using spin-polarized STM

Research Group Members

Current Group Members
Jeonghim Pak
Research Scientist
Wenzhi Lin
4th Year Graduate Student
KangKang Wang
3rd Year Graduate Student
Abhijit Chinchore
3rd Year Graduate Student
Tianjiao Chen
Sophomore

Past Group Members
Haiqiang Yang
postdoc ('00-'02)
Hamad Al-Brithen
Ph.D. fall '04
Costel Constantin
Ph.D. fall '05
Muhammad Haider
Ph.D. fall '05
Rong Yang Ph.D. June '06
Erdong Lu postdoc ('04-'07)

Information about former students:

1.  Hamad Al-Brithen, Ph.D. 2004:  Assistant Professor, Physics & Astronomy Department, Department, King Saud University, 2005 – present.  Hamad Al-Brithen obtained his Ph.D. in fall 2004 and went directly into a tenure track assistant professor position at King Saud University, Saudia Arabia, in the Physics & Astronomy Department there.  Hamad is active in the nanoscience efforts at King Saud and is working to build up research efforts there.  Hamad has returned to Athens in three consecutive summers beginning in 2006, to continue some research activities here and to attend the international nanoscience conference hosted by the NQPI group in Athens in July 2008.  During 2008, Hamad also took up a mini sabbatical post at MIT.

<>2.  Costel Constantin, Ph.D. 2005:  Assistant Professor, Physics Department, Seton Hall University, 2007 – present.  Costel obtained his Ph.D. in fall 2005.  He took a postdoctoral position with Professor Randy Feenstra at Carnegie Mellon University at the end of 2005, where he stayed for one year.  After that, Costel began a tenure track assistant professor position at Seton Hall University, New Jersey, beginning in Fall 2007.  Costel continues to be interested in research and is setting up his own lab at Seton Hall.  Besides this, he is also continuing some collaborations with me on selected topics.

3.  Muhammad B. Haider, Ph.D. 2005, Postdoctoral Fellow, National Institute of Nanotechnology/Physics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, 2006 – present. Muhammad received his Ph.D. in fall 2005.  Following graduation, Muhammad took a postdoctoral position at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, working in the group of Professor Robert Wolkow, internationally recognized expert in scanning tunneling microscopy and Chair in Nanoscale Information and Communication Technologies.

4.  Rong Yang, Ph.D. 2006:  Associate Professor, National Center for Nanoscience and Technology, Beijing, China, 2008 – present.  Rong Yang graduated with her Ph.D. in summer 2006 and went right away to work as a Postdoctoral Associate in the group of Professor Chris Palmstrom, at the University of Minnesota, within the Chemical Engineering and Materials Science Department.  One year later, Rong and her family moved to Beijing, China.  In early 2008, Rong was appointed to a faculty position within the National Center for Nanoscience and Technology in Beijing, where she is currently employed.



at the MRS International Workshop on Nitride Semiconductors, summer 2004:
(left to right) Costel Constantin, Rong Yang, Hamad Al-Brithen, Muhammad Haider, and Art

picture of the group at IWN-2004


picture of group at IWN-2004


On the Occasion of Rong's graduation (l-to-r: Wenzhi Lin, Rong Yang, Art, Erdong Lu, Abhijit Chinchore, and KangKang Wang)


My research is concerned with surfaces of semiconductors and metals, particularly focusing on the growth of these materials using molecular beam epitaxy. The analysis techniques of choice in my lab are reflection high energy electron diffraction (RHEED) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). RHEED gives information about the growing crystal surface as viewed in reciprocal space during growth; STM gives detailed views of the atomic-scale surface structure. Using these techniques in tandem allows a powerful approach to understanding the relationship between surface structure and growth.

Recently, I am investigating the use of spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy in studying the magnetic structure of surfaces down to the atomic scale.



Full Publication List

Image Gallery

Laboratory Homepage



Teaching

currently:

PHYS 201 - Introductory Physics (winter 2008)


previously:

PHYS 731: Graduate Condensed Matter Physics (part 1)

PHYS 894 - Special Topics:
Surfaces, Surface Nanostructures, and Surface Analytical Techniques


    K-12 Outreach

NIRT NSNM Outreach program:
  
K-12 school presentations, nanoscience website, K-12 essay contests

NIRT Web Page:  OUNSNM (Ohio University Nanospintronics and Nanomagnetics)
A NIRT (Nanoscale Interdisciplinary Research Team) grant from the National Science Foundation
has enabled us to begin a new line of research involving the study of nanoscale spintronic and magnetic structures.
This web site is devoted to the research, education, and outreach associated with the grant.

ATOMS PROGRAM

(Advanced Techniques of Microscopic Science)
With funding provided by the National Science Foundation (NSF), a program for K-12 teachers and their students, called ATOMS, was established.  The primary goal of ATOMS is to increase science and technology opportunities for Southeastern Ohio students by exposing them to Nobel Prize-winning technology.  This is achieved by making available to local students and their teachers a scanning tunneling microscope (STM).  The STM is capable of imaging surfaces with atomic resolution.
 New ATOMS Web Site




Physics and Astronomy Library Home Page



Collaborators
  • Randall Feenstra (Carnegie Mellon University)
  • Dave Greve (Carnegie Mellon University)
  • Toshio Sakurai (Institute for Materials Research, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan)
  • Daniel Gall (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute)
  • Ron Cappelletti and Julie Borchers (National Institute of Standards and Technology)
  • Walter Lambrecht (Case Western Reserve University)
  • Joerg Neugebauer (Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung GmbH, Max-Planck Str. 1, 40237 Düsseldorf, Germany)



  • Other links
    k-Space Associates, Inc.