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Pre-Meeting Guide Advance Program & Pre-Meeting Guide At-A-Glance Symposium Schedule Details on Pre-Meeting Congresses Ancillary Meeting & Venue Information www.microscopy.org/MandM/2019 for up-to-date meeting information Future Meeting Dates Contents Highlights & Awards . 3 Essential Meeting Information . 4 Hotel, Travel & City Information . 5 Registration . 6 August 2-6 Milwaukee, WI Convention Center Map . 7 Social Events . 8-9 August 1-5, 2021 PITTSBURGH, PA Sponsors & Exhibitors . 10 Week-At-A-Glance . 11-18 Friday, August 2 . 11 Saturday, August 3 . 11 July 31-August 4, 2022 Sunday, August 4 . 11 PORTLAND, OR Monday, August 5 . 11 Tuesday, August 6 . 12 Wednesday, August 7 . 15 Thursday, August 8 . 17 July 23-27, 2023 Meetings & Events Schedule . 19-20 MINNEAPOLIS, MN Sustaining Members . 21 MSA MegaBooth . 22 2020 Save-the-Date . 23 July 28-August 1, 2024 CLEVELAND, OH 2 www.microscopy.org/MandM/2019 for up-to-date meeting information Highlights & Awards MSA Major Society Plenary Session Award Winners The M&M 2019 Executive Program Committee is pleased to present two of the three 2017 Laureates of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry “for developing BURTON MEDAL cryo-electron microscopy for the high-resolution structure determination of Hari Shroff, National Institutes of Health biomolecules in solution,” shared with Jacques Dubochet. MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 2019 ALBERT CREWE AWARD Portland Ballroom – Oregon Convention Center Layla Mehdi, University of Liverpool, UK For speaker bios and presentation details, visit GEORGE PALADE AWARD www.microscopy.org/MandM/2019/program/plenary.cfm Alex Noble, New York Structural Biology Center Joachim Frank, Ph.D. HILDEGARD H. CROWLEY AWARD Professor of Biochemistry, Molecular Biophysics, and Biological FOR OUTSTANDING TECHNOLOGIST, Sciences, Columbia University BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES Matthew 0Joens, Apple Inc. Studying Kinetics by Counting Particles in Time-Resolved Cryo-EM CHUCK FIORI AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING TECHNOLOGIST, Richard Henderson, Ph.D. PHYSICAL SCIENCES Dmitri Zakharov, Brookhaven Professor of Biochemistry, Medical Research Council Laboratory of National Laboratory Molecular Biology (MRC LMB) - Cambridge, United Kingdom Single-Particle CryoEM: Potential for Further Improvement MAS Major Society Award Winners PRESIDENTIAL SCIENCE AWARD MSA Distinguished Scientist Awards & Talks Lawrence Allard, Oak Ridge National Laboratory TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2019, 12:15 PM | Oregon Convention Center, Room TBA DISTINGUISHED SCIENTIST – PHYSICAL SCIENCES PRESIDENTIAL SERVICE AWARD Philip Batson, Rutgers University, Rutgers, NJ Lucille Giannuzzi, EXpressLO LLC Mapping Quantum Excitations in Space-Time using Electron PETER DUNCUMB AWARD FOR Energy Loss Spectroscopy EXCELLENCE IN MICROANALYSIS David Seideman, Northwestern University DISTINGUISHED SCIENTIST – BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES Bridget Carragher, New York Structural Biological Center, New York City, NY KURT F.J. HEINRICH AWARD Fun with Automation, and Some Thoughts About What Happens Next Miaofang Chi, Oak Ridge National Laboratory BIRKS AWARD Ery Hugues, University of Bristol, United Kingdom 1ST PLACE WINNER - M&M 2018 MICROGRAPH MACRES AWARD COMPETITION Lewys Jones, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Timothy Pegg, Miami University (OH) - COSSLETT AWARD Motley Spheres SLASH Prismatic Spheres Jordan Hachtel, Oak Ridge National Laboratory CASTAING AWARD Bradley De Gregorio, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory MICROSCOPY & MICROANALYSIS 2019 MEETING | August 4-8 | Portland, OR 3 Essential Meeting & Venue Information Accessibility Job & Resume Postings/ If you require special accommodation in Placement Office order to participate fully in the meeting, (See MSA MegaBooth info on Page 22.) please ask to speak with the meeting Post your company’s or department’s job manager, or email MeetingManager@ listing, peruse posted resumes for that microscopy.org. Requests made after perfect job candidate, or post your own July 1 or onsite at the meeting will be resume. Take advantage of thousands of accommodated as much as possible. microscopists and microscopy companies all gathered in one place! Go to the MSA Awards MegaBooth (Exhibit Hall) for details. Major Society Awards for MSA, MAS, and IFES, along with M&M student awards, M&M 2020 – Meeting will be presented at the Plenary Session & City Information immediately following the first Plenary Stop by for advance information on Talk (Monday morning). For detailed the 2020 M&M Meeting in Milwaukee, listings of all awards, criteria, and award Wisconsin! The 2020 table is located winners, please visit http://microscopy. in the main registration area, and has org/MandM/2019/. visitors guides, maps, and other important information. Cancellation and Refund Policy MSA MegaBooth Proceedings Refund requests received prior to July Conference Proceedings are distributed at 19, 2019 will be honored less a $65 (Booth #) Registration. All Full Meeting registrations administrative fee. No refunds will be (See complete details on Page 22.) include a free copy of the proceedings issued for cancellations (for any reason) Check out all that MSA has to offer its on digital or online medium. Hard-copy received on or after July 19, 2019, and members and M&M attendees: free proceedings are available for purchase no refunds will be issued on-site in Internet Café, book display from scientific ($95) through Cambridge University Portland. E-mail: MMRegistration@ publishers, updated information on the Press (allow 12-16 weeks for delivery). conferencemanagers.com or fax Certification Board, and a DVD Library. Inquire at the Registration Desk or email: (703) 964-1246. Register for the popular Vendor Tutorials, [email protected]. sign up for MSA Membership, check out recent editions of Microscopy Today, Food for Purchase learn about Project MICRO, and join the MAS Booth Inexpensive, portable breakfast and Technologists’ Forum. MAS has a membership and information snack items are available for purchase booth located in the main registration in the convention center on the exhibit/ foyer. Sign up for membership, get registration level (7:30 am–10:30 am). Phone Numbers & information on Society events at or after Lunch concessions are available for Information the M&M Meeting, and talk with MAS purchase inside the exhibit hall during • Oregon Convention Center Main: members and stakeholders to learn how lunch hours (11:00 am–2:00 pm). (503) 235-7575 to get involved! Portland & Regional • Exhibitor Service Desk: [email protected] Smoking Policy Visitor Information • ZOOM+Care NE Grand Super Clinic M&M 2019 is a smoke-free meeting. If Stop by the Travel Portland booth you wish to smoke, you will need to go located inside the convention center, (Urgent Care): (503) 684-8252 outside (street level). to pick up local information, including (7 days: 7:00 am–midnight); maps, dining guides and tour info, and www.zoomcare.com visitor information on Portland and Tote Bags • Emergency Room (24 hours): surrounding areas. All non-Exhibitor Full Meeting Registrants Oregon Health & Science are entitled to a meeting tote bag. Bags University (OHSU): (503) 494-7551 Internet & E-mail are distributed in the registration area. Free wireless internet is available for M&M attendees in the Oregon Volunteer Room Convention Center. Check your email The volunteer & student bursary office is and surf the web at the Internet Café in Room D-129 on the exhibit level. Check inside the M&M exhibit hall during in here for volunteer assignments and exhibit hours (located next to the MSA sign-outs. MegaBooth). For more information on the MegaBooth, go to page 22. 4 www.microscopy.org/MandM/2019 for up-to-date meeting information Essential Meeting & Venue Information Hotel, Travel & City Information N Interstate Ave NE Broadway Ground 405 2 NE Weidler Transportation 3 RENTAL CAR/VAN/ NW Northrup egdByriwadaoBr 1 4 SHUTTLE: NW Lovejoy 5 NE Holladay https://www.flypdx.com GroundTransportation for STREETCAR To Airport egdirBleetS detailed information on taxi Oregon service, limousine service, Convention Center and scheduled shuttle 84 service fees and schedules. NW Glisan NW 11th NW 10th MAX LIGHT RAIL: NW Everett 5 Portland features one of the best light-rail systems in the MAX LIGHT RAIL MAX LIGHT RAIL country. One-way fare from West Burnside Burnside Bridge East Burnside 7 the airport to downtown 8 Portland is $2.50. Visit SW Sixth for fares, SW Fifth www.trimet.org schedules, and system maps. LAIRTHGXLIAM SW Washington SE 11th SE 12th Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Grand Avenue. MORE PORTLAND R E TRAVEL INFO: SW Morrison V I For detailed attraction, tour, 405 SW Yamhill R dining and travel information MorrisonBridge SE Water SE Morrison for visitors, please go to the E T SE Belmont Travel Portland website at 6 T www.travelportland.com. SW Main E M SW Madison A SW 11th L SW 10th L I SW Broadway W Getting To & SE Madison hwtaHo HOTELS 9 egdBrienr SE Hawthorne Around Portland Oregon Convention Center The Portland 1 DoubleTree by Hilton International Airport 5 2 Crowne Plaza Portland (PDX) is located only 12 3 Courtyard Portland Convention Center miles (roughly 20 minutes STREETCAR 4 Residence Inn Convention Center 405 Naito Parkway 5 Hotel Eastlund by car) from downtown 6 Hilton Portland Downtown Portland. The airport MarquamBrdige 7 Embassy Suites by Hilton Portland features free Wi-Fi, guest SW Lincoln 8 The Benson Hotel services information yawkraPrevRi 9 Portland Marriott Downtown Waterfront and assistance center, SE Division and several restaurants, stores, and personal- Tilikum Bridge A v e . services outlets. Visit PORTLAND CITY CENTER . SE Powell Blvd. M o o d y https://flypdx.com/ for egdirBdnalsI detailed information soRs Hotels & Reservations 5 about the airport. The open reservations portal, as well as the most current listing of available hotels and rates, is a vailable at: https://www.microscopy.org/MandM/2019/hoteltravel/hotel.cfm. Book your room through the M&M 2019 Housing Bureau, and get an immediate reservation confirmation. A valid credit card is required to reserve a room. Maps showing details about neighborhoods, downtown, and other areas of the city are available on the Travel Portland website and are downloadable from: https://www.travelportland.com/plan-your-trip/maps-of-portland/.
Recommended publications
  • The Chiton Radula: a Unique Model for Biomineralization Studies
    4 The Chiton Radula: A Unique Model for Biomineralization Studies Lesley R. Brooker1 and Jeremy A. Shaw2 1University of the Sunshine Coast 2Centre for Microscopy, Characterisation & Analysis University of Western Australia Australia 1. Introduction Over the course of evolution, a range of strategies have been developed by different organisms to produce unique materials and structures perfected for their specific function. This biological mastery of materials production has inspired the birth of the new discipline of biomaterials through biomimicry (Birchall, 1989). Chitons (Mollusca: Polyplacophora) are slow moving, bilaterally symmetrical and dorso- ventrally flattened molluscs that are commonly found on hard substrata in intertidal regions of coastlines around the world (Kaas & Jones, 1998). All species are characterized by a series of eight dorsal, articulating shell plates or valves, which may be embedded, to varying degrees, in a fleshy, muscular girdle (Kaas & Jones, 1998) (Figure 1). Approximately 750 living species are known, and while intertidal regions are home to the majority of chitons, a number of species can be found at depths of up to 8000m where they feed on detrital material (Kaas & Jones, 1998). Fig. 1. Photograph of the dorsal surface of the chiton Acanthopleura gaimardi, showing the eight overlapping aragonite plates surrounded by the fleshy girdle, which, in this species, is covered in small aragonite spines. Chitons feed by rasping macro- and micro-algae from the rocks on which they live through the use of a radula. The radula has been coined as a conveyor belt of continuously developing www.intechopen.com 66 Advanced Topics in Biomineralization teeth, replaced by new teeth as they are worn and lost.
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    International Materials Reviews ISSN: 0950-6608 (Print) 1743-2804 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/yimr20 Three-dimensional nanoscale characterisation of materials by atom probe tomography Arun Devaraj, Daniel E. Perea, Jia Liu, Lyle M. Gordon, Ty. J. Prosa, Pritesh Parikh, David R. Diercks, Subhashish Meher, R. Prakash Kolli, Ying Shirley Meng & Suntharampillai Thevuthasan To cite this article: Arun Devaraj, Daniel E. Perea, Jia Liu, Lyle M. Gordon, Ty. J. Prosa, Pritesh Parikh, David R. Diercks, Subhashish Meher, R. Prakash Kolli, Ying Shirley Meng & Suntharampillai Thevuthasan (2017): Three-dimensional nanoscale characterisation of materials by atom probe tomography, International Materials Reviews, DOI: 10.1080/09506608.2016.1270728 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09506608.2016.1270728 Published online: 26 Jan 2017. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 11 View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=yimr20 Download by: [The UC San Diego Library] Date: 30 January 2017, At: 14:49 INTERNATIONAL MATERIALS REVIEWS, 2017 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09506608.2016.1270728 FULL CRITICAL REVIEW Three-dimensional nanoscale characterisation of materials by atom probe tomography Arun Devaraja, Daniel E. Pereab, Jia Liub, Lyle M. Gordonb, Ty. J. Prosac, Pritesh Parikhd, David R. Diercks e, Subhashish Meherf, R. Prakash Kolli g, Ying Shirley Mengd and Suntharampillai Thevuthasanh
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  • Dynamic Effects in Voltage Pulsed Atom Probe Loïc Rousseau, Antoine Normand, Felipe Morgado, Leigh Stephenson, Baptiste Gault, Kambiz Tehrani, François Vurpillot
    Dynamic Effects in Voltage Pulsed Atom Probe Loïc Rousseau, Antoine Normand, Felipe Morgado, Leigh Stephenson, Baptiste Gault, Kambiz Tehrani, François Vurpillot To cite this version: Loïc Rousseau, Antoine Normand, Felipe Morgado, Leigh Stephenson, Baptiste Gault, et al.. Dynamic Effects in Voltage Pulsed Atom Probe. Microscopy and Microanalysis, Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2020, 26 (6), pp.1133-1146. 10.1017/S1431927620024587. hal-03013684 HAL Id: hal-03013684 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03013684 Submitted on 3 May 2021 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Edited with the trial version of Foxit Advanced PDF Editor To remove this notice, visit: doi:10.1017/S1431927620024587 www.foxitsoftware.com/shopping Dynamic Effects in Voltage Pulsed Atom Probe Loïc Rousseau1,2* , Antoine Normand1, Felipe F. Morgado3, Leigh Stephenson3, Baptiste Gault3,4 , Kambiz Tehrani2 and François Vurpillot1 1Groupe Physique des Matériaux, Université de Rouen, Saint Etienne du Rouvray, Normandie 76800, France; 2ESIGELEC, Avenue Galilée, Saint Etienne du Rouvray, Normandie 76800, France; 3Max-Planck Institut für Eisenforschung GmbH, Düsseldorf D-40237, Germany and 4Department of Material, Royal School of Mines, Imperial College, London, UK Abstract Atom probe tomography (APT) is particularly suited for the analysis of nanoscale microstructural features in metallic alloys.
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  • Direct Observation of Hydrogen and Deuterium in Oxide Grain Boundaries in Corroded Zirconium Alloys
    Final manuscript Corrosion Science 90 (2015) 1-4 Direct observation of hydrogen and deuterium in oxide grain boundaries in corroded Zirconium alloys G. Sundell1, M. Thuvander1, A.K. Yatim2, H. Nordin3, H.-O. Andrén1 E-mail: [email protected] Phone: +46-(0)31-772 3291 1 Dept. of Applied Physics Chalmers University of Technology 412 96 Göteborg, Sweden 2 I. Institute of Physics (IA) RWTH Aachen University 52056 Aachen, Germany 3 Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd Chalk River Laboratories Chalk River Ontario K0J 1J0 Canada Abstract Atom probe tomography has been used to the study the distribution of hydrogen and deuterium in the oxide scale of two common zirconium alloys after autoclave testing in H2O and D2O, respectively. Comparison between hydrogen and deuterium in the mass spectra allows for separation of hydrogen as a corrosion product from adsorbed H2 gas from the vacuum chamber. Enrichment of hydrogen and deuterium, as OH+ and OD+, was observed in grain boundaries. The grain boundaries were identified through segregation of iron. This lends experimental support to existing theories for the mechanism of hydrogen pick- up in zirconium alloys. Keywords: A. Atom probe; B. Hydrogen pick-up; C. Zirconium alloys; D. Corrosion; E. Grain boundaries; F. Deuterium Introduction Perhaps the least understood degradation phenomenon of zirconium alloys for nuclear applications is the mechanism of hydrogen pick-up. During waterside corrosion, a fraction of the hydrogen that is released in the water decomposition reaction will be absorbed by the fuel cladding [1] and precipitate as hydrides, eventually leading to embrittlement of the material [2]. Although many studies have been conducted on the subject, no widely accepted mechanism exists that describe how hydrogen penetrates the passive ZrO2 films that are formed on the alloys.
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  • Atom Probe Thomas F
    SCIENCEA Brief & METROLOGY History SOLUTIONS of Atom Probe Thomas F. Kelly and John A. Panitz Pre-meeting Congress, M&M 2016 SCIENCE & METROLOGY SOLUTIONS & METROLOGY SCIENCE www.cameca.com Ancestry of the Modern Atom Probe SCIENCE & METROLOGY SOLUTIONS SCIENCE & METROLOGY SOLUTIONS & METROLOGY SCIENCE A Brief History of Atom Probe July 24, 2016 2 Erwin Wilhelm Müller SCIENCE & METROLOGY SOLUTIONS SCIENCE & METROLOGY SOLUTIONS & METROLOGY SCIENCE Photograph of Professor Erwin W. Müller (1911-1977): Father of High Field Nanoscience A Brief History of Atom Probe July 24, 2016 3 Field Electron Emission Microscopy 1935 - electron SCIENCE & METROLOGY SOLUTIONS Fluorescent Screen ̶ E + SCIENCE & METROLOGY SOLUTIONS & METROLOGY SCIENCE E. W. Müller, Z. Phys. 120 (1943) 270 A Brief History of Atom Probe July 24, 2016 4 Field Electron Emission Microscopy ■ Field electron emission microscopy (FEEM) was developed as a point projection microscope ■ FEEM patterns showed clear crystallographic information ■ Ba atoms and phthalocyanine molecules were observed on W needlesSCIENCE with FEEM & METROLOGY SOLUTIONS ■ Image resolution improved through the late 1940’s ■ Müller sought to resolve atoms with FEEM ■ Eventually it was concluded that FEEM would resolve no better than ~2 nm ■ Field desorption (and evaporation?) was shown in 1941 SCIENCE & METROLOGY SOLUTIONS & METROLOGY SCIENCE A Brief History of Atom Probe July 24, 2016 5 Field Ion Microscopy • FEEM tips were routinely cleaned by reversing the bias • Practitioners of FEEM noticed: • Field ions were
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  • Quantification Challenges for Atom Probe Tomography of Hydrogen and Deuterium in Zircaloy-4 Isabelle Moutona,*, Andrew J
    Quantification challenges for atom probe tomography of hydrogen and deuterium in Zircaloy-4 Isabelle Moutona,*, Andrew J. Breena, Siyang Wangb, Yanhong Changa, Agnieszka Szczepaniaka, Paraskevas Kontisa, Leigh T. Stephensona, Dierk Raabea, M. Herbiga, T. Ben Brittonb, Baptiste Gaulta,* a Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung, Max-Planck-Straße 1, 40237 Düsseldorf, Germany. b Department of Materials, Royal School of Mines, Imperial College London, London, SW7 2AZ, UK *corresponding author E-mail address: [email protected]; [email protected] Postal address: Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung, Max-Planck-Straße 1, 40237 Düsseldorf, Germany. Abstract: Analysis and understanding of the role of hydrogen in metals is a significant challenge for the future of materials science, and this is a clear objective of recent work in the atom probe tomography (APT) community. Isotopic marking by deuteration has often been proposed as the preferred route to enable quantification of hydrogen by APT. Zircaloy-4 was charged electrochemically with hydrogen and deuterium under the same conditions to form large hydrides and deuterides. Our results from a Zr hydride and a Zr deuteride highlight challenges associated to accurate quantification of hydrogen and deuterium, in particular associated to the overlap of peaks at low mass-to-charge ratio and of hydrogen/deuterium containing molecular ions. We discuss possible ways to ensure that appropriate information is extracted from APT analysis of hydrogen in a zirconium alloy systems that is important for nuclear power. Keywords: Atom probe tomography, deuterium, hydrogen, zirconium alloy, nuclear materials, quantification 1 Introduction Atom probe tomography (APT) combines a time-of-flight mass spectrometer with a projection microscope (Müller et al., 1968).
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