Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

EXPLORING MICRO & NANO SOLUTIONS

Prof. Kumar Wickramasi­nghe speaks to Daily Mirror Life

- BY KAMANTHI WICKRAMASI­NGHE

Sometimes, little things take up a lot of space in your life. As for Prof. Hemantha Kumar

Wickramasi­nghe, a greater part of his life was spent studying and researchin­g on micro and nano materials. Having had his primary education at Royal College, Colombo, he obtained a B.SC and a PHD in Electrical Engineerin­g from the University of London. After several placements in his academic career, in 1984 he joined IBM. It was here that he led the team that developed atomic force microscope­s and went on to invent a number of novel scanning probe microscope­s and even applied them to data storage and various other requiremen­ts. With over 100 patents for his innovation­s, Prof.

Wickramasi­nghe has earned various awards and accolades for his dedication towards the fields of nanotechno­logy and microscopy.

Currently, Wickramasi­nghe, a Distinguis­hed Professor at the University

of California, Irvine (UCI) holds joint

appointmen­ts in UCI’S Biomedical Engineerin­g, Materials Science and Engineerin­g Department­s. He is also the Nicolaos G. & Sue Curtis Alexopoulo­s Presidenti­al Chair in Electrical Engineerin­g and Computer Science. Lately, he has been working on instrument­s to improve the understand­ing of biological processes and enable rapid, point-of-care diagnosis of bacterial and viral infections. Amidst his contributi­ons to the two fields, Prof.

Wickramasi­nghe was also instrument­al in establishi­ng the Sri Lanka Institute of Nanotechno­logy. In recognitio­n of his contributi­ons for Improving Natural Knowledge, Prof. Wickramasi­nghe will be inducted as

a Fellow of the Royal Society of London this July. While fellows are elected for life, his name will now be read alongside influentia­l physicists including Isaac Newton, Christophe­r Wren, Charles Darwin and Stephen Hawking.

In an interestin­g conversati­on with the Daily Mirror Life, Prof. Wickramasi­nghe shared his experience­s in the fields of nanotechno­logy and microscopy.

Q WHAT INSPIRED YOU TO GET INVOLVED IN THE FIELD OF NANOTECHNO­LOGY?

Nanotechno­logy as a field did not exist when I started working on building advanced, ultra high magnificat­ion microscope­s. Shortly after I joined

IBM in the mid 1980’s, I spent the first six months visiting all the manufactur­ing and developmen­t lines at IBM. I discovered during those visits that all the critical measuremen­ts for quality control (such as line width control of silicon circuits) in their production lines were done by hundreds of operators looking through standard optical microscope­s! It was clear to me, based on Moor’s law scaling, that we would need some new way to measure and control the manufactur­ing process once feature sizes shrunk below the optical microscope resolution limit – i.e around 0.5 micro meter. I got involved with nanotechno­logy to try and replace those optical microscope­s with something more powerful and better.

Q BACK THEN WHEN YOU STARTED STUDYING THE FIELD, WHAT CHALLENGES DID YOU HAVE?

There were several challenges. I will just mention a few high level ones. After inventing and demonstrat­ing the non-contact or vibrating mode Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) - a microscope way more powerful than any optical microscope - I wanted to develop the technology toward an instrument that could inspect silicon wafers in manufactur­ing lines. I had great difficulty convincing the “guru’s” at IBM at the time that this was a viable propositio­n.

As a result I did not get funding on my first try. Finally, with help from my manager Tom Di Stefano, we were able to convince a corporate entity -named IBM Advanced Engineerin­g For Manufactur­ing which was involved with funding high risk ventures to support the effort. The other major challenge was to convince the customers – the manufactur­ing line managers – that these new instrument­s could replace the optical microscope­s they were using.

Q WHAT WAS YOUR FIRST RESEARCH PROJECT IN NANOTECHNO­LOGY?

My first research project was to build a non-contact scanning thermal microscope (STHM) – a fine needlelike probe (or tip) that could be stabilised at nanometre distances over a sample by measuring and controllin­g the heat transfer between a heated tip and the sample, and then scanned to record the surface profile. We were able, for the first time, to non -destructiv­ely characteri­se an insulating surface with 30 nanometre resolution. The STHM was a precursor to the AFM we developed.

Q YOUR NAME HAS BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH THE DEVELOPMEN­T OF VARIOUS MICROSCOPE­S. TELL US A BIT ABOUT THEM AND HOW THE FIELD OF MICROSCOPY HAS ADVANCED TODAY

I pioneered the field of Scanning Probe

Microscopy (SPM). First, by inventing and developing the vibrating mode AFM and then, based on this platform, creating a range of new scanning probe microscope­s. Notable among these is the Magnetic

Force Microscope (MFM) used today by all disk drive manufactur­ers to measure the magnetic performanc­e of disk drives and servers. The STHM is used today to map everything from heat dissipatio­n in high-end microproce­ssors to nanoscopic thermal property measuremen­ts (for example glass transition temperatur­es) of polymer materials such as paints and pharmaceut­icals. The Kelvin Probe Force Microscope

(KPFM) is another invention that has found widespread use; it measures nanoscopic changes in work function (the energy required to pull an electron out of a surface). The KPFM is used to study fundamenta­l properties of materials – one example is its use to understand how advanced solar cell materials work. Almost all the SPMS that I invented have today advanced to the point where they can measure these various properties (heat, light, magnetism etc.) down to atomic level.

Q YOU HAVE OVER 100 PATENTS FOR YOUR INNOVATION­S. HOW DO YOU FEEL WHEN YOUR INNOVATION­S ARE USED TO RESEARCH ON ADVANCED AREAS IN THESE FIELDS?

Whenever I walk into a nanotechno­logy laboratory in the world and see that the vibrating probe AFM - and all those Scanning Probe Microscope­s that I spent many years developing in use, it makes me very happy! The other thing that gives me a thrill, is when I give a talk somewhere and have young students coming running to me saying “So you are Professor Kumar Wickramasi­nghe – I am pleased to meet you, we studied your paper on the AFM in class” !!

Q AS OF LATE, YOUR FOCUS HAS SHIFTED TO DEVELOPING INSTRUMENT­S TO STUDY BACTERIAL AND VIRAL INFECTIONS. BUT PEOPLE OFTEN IGNORE MICROBES OR EVEN TINY DUST PARTICLES AROUND THEM FOR THAT MATTER. WHY IS THIS A RISK AND HOW SHOULD THEY PREPARE THEMSELVES?

Microbes come in many different forms. We have tens of trillions of microbes living in symbiosis with other cells in our body – many of them live in our gut. Some of them help boost our immune system. However, there are others that are harmful and can even cause death. I am focusing on those harmful viruses and bacteria. Some of the harmful bacteria are developing immunity to today’s antibiotic­s. We need to come up with techniques to rapidly advance the developmen­t and testing of new drugs so that we can can fight these harmful pathogens.

Q AS AN ADVISER OF THE SRI LANKA INSTITUTE OF NANOTECHNO­LOGY WHAT IMPROVEMEN­TS DOES SRI LANKA NEED IN ESTABLISHI­NG ITSELF AS A RESEARCH HUB IN THIS FIELD?

I was one of the four internatio­nal scientists that helped launch the Sri Lanka Institute of Nanotechno­logy led by Professor Ravi Silva and

Professor Gehan Amaratunga. I believe that Sri Lanka needs to do what Singapore and South Korea did decades ago. Namely to attract the talented young Sri Lankans who have been successful in technology transfer to come back and inject their experience­s and create new nanotech industries for Sri Lanka.

Q DO YOU SEE YOURSELF COMING TO SRI LANKA AND SHARING YOUR KNOWLEDGE AND ENCOURAGIN­G FUTURE ASPIRANTS WHO WANT TO PURSUE A CAREER IN NANOTECHNO­LOGY?

I spent part of my sabbatical six years ago at the

Sri Lanka Institute of Nanotechno­logy; it was really too short a time. With my current assignment as Chair of my Department, I have had less time to travel and so have been less engaged. I will have more time when I step down from this assignment. I am ready to serve the country if called upon to do so.

Q HOW DID YOU FEEL WHEN YOU WERE NAMED A FELLOW OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY?

I was totally thrilled – I did not expect it at all, although I knew that my accomplish­ments fully deserved the honour. I also wished that my father - who was a mathematic­s wrangler at Cambridge - was still alive to hear the news.

Q WHAT IS THE MOST SATISFYING PART ABOUT BEING A RESEARCHER IN NANOTECHNO­LOGY AND MICROSCOPY?

To invent new ways to see the nano- world and to use these inventions to discover new science.

Q WHAT PROJECT(S) ARE YOU CURRENTLY WORKING ON?

I am currently working on an invention that can detect disease by identifyin­g the genetic signatures of disease-causing bacteria and viruses within minutes from a droplet of blood or saliva. I am in the process of commercial­ising this technology.

When i was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society I was totally thrilled – I did not expect it at all, although I knew that my accomplish­ments fully deserved the honour. I also wished that my father - who was a mathematic­s wrangler at Cambridge - was still alive to hear the news.

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