News & events

The 18th International Workshop on Nanomechanical sensing, this year in Bangalore, India will start soon!

The OXiNEMS members will present two contributions: Nicola Manca is going to present the poster “Stress Analysis and Q-Factor of Free-Standing (La,Sr)MnO3 Oxide Resonators”  and Dhavalkumar Mungpara will give a seminar on the OXiNEMS magnetometer entitled “Towards nanomechanical detection of tiny magnetic fields”.

Here is the picture from iWOE27 (www.iwoe27.eu). The workshop counted 187 participants overall, 96 in person and 91 in remote. 102 posters and 49 talks. iWOE27 was hold in Genova, Italy, in the wonderful setting of Palazzo Ducale, October 13-15, 2021

 

OXiNEMS - second project meeting

The second project meeting took place in Chieti (Italy) at ITAB - Institute for Advanced Biomedical Technologies on November 21st-22nd.

The participants had the opportunity to visit the MEG system and the Very-Low field MRI system operating at ITAB. Specifically, the participants had the possibility to discuss all the technical details relating the operation of the prototype device in a biomagnetic environment. The OXiNEMS magnetic field sensors will be finally tested in such a facility inside the Magnetically Shielded Rooms.

The 3rd OXiNEMS project meeting took place on April 22nd and 23rd in a web-based format. Participants from all the OXiNEMS units discussed the recent results on the project activities and attended the exploitation workshop run by META Group, working together on the topic of identifying and characterizing Key Exploitable Results coming from the project.

kick-off meeting of the H2020 FET OPEN project OXiNEMS

The kick-off meeting of the H2020 FET OPEN project OXiNEMS has been organized at CNR-SPIN headquarters in Genova on May 6th and 7th, 2019.

The involved European groups gathered to strengthen relationships, have scientific discussions and detail the first steps of the project.The OXiNEMS project plans to develop innovative nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS) based on multifunctional (epitaxial) transition metal oxides. The OXiNEMS team will implement ultrasensitive detectors able to measure very weak magnetic fields targeting those generated by human brain activity, of the order of tens of femtotesla.

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