Entry Date:
October 1, 2020

Frances Ross Research Group

Principal Investigator Frances Ross

Project Website https://fmross.mit.edu/

Project Start Date October 2020


Research interests are centered on understanding and controlling materials growth at nanometer length scales using specialized microscopy techniques. If we can watch materials as they react, we have a much better chance of understanding the physics underlying the reaction. And if we can understand a reaction in detail, it is easier to work out how to control it in order to create materials with the structure or properties that we need. Our research therefore involves putting different materials in an electron microscope then recording movies as we heat, deposit another material, flow a current, or apply any other stimulus that will lead to a growth process or a phase transformation. Electron microscopes with unique capabilities for probing materials form the basis of our projects. We also use a custom scanning tunneling microscope. Calibrated conditions and quantitative measurements are necessary for developing models that explain the reactions that take place; the models can then be used to predict circumstances that might produce useful outcomes. The materials reactions that we focus on have relevance to electronic applications, energy storage and catalysis.