In this video, Rajiv Giridharagopal and David S. Ginger from the University of Washington discuss their Perspective published in issue 7 of the Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters.
Morphology and Topology are two different things. AFMs measure the surface and while you get valuable information about the cell you fabricated the "morphology" picture shown in no way can be drawn from scanning the surface. Example, the earth core can not be understood by taking a soil sample. Our scientific community should be careful with semantics because they are important.
Morphology and Topology are two different things. AFMs measure the surface and while you get valuable information about the cell you fabricated the "morphology" picture shown in no way can be drawn from scanning the surface. Example, the earth core can not be understood by taking a soil sample. Our scientific community should be careful with semantics because they are important.
brettgural 7 months ago