ONE (1) POST-DOCTORAL RESEARCHER IN PROJECT NEP
The deadline to apply for this position has expired.
Publication Date
08/07/2022
Application Deadline
23/07/2022
Position Category
Reference Number
2022_83877
Salary
Location
Herakleion, Crete, Greece
Contact Person
Start Date
01/09/2022

Position Description

Laser micro/nano fabrication of pseudo periodic arrays

For the full announcement, follow the link "Related Documents"

Required Qualifications

  • PhD degree in Physical Sciences 
  • At least three years of experience in the position’s topic
  • Scientific publications relevant to the topic, in international scientific journals 
  • Fluency in English 

Application Procedure

Interested candidates who meet the aforementioned requirements are kindly asked to submit their applications with cc to the Scientific Responsible, Dr Emmanuel Stratakis (stratak@iesl.forth.gr).

 

In order to be considered, the application must include:

  • Application Form (Form Greek or Form English to the left)
  • Detailed curriculum vitae (CV) of the candidate
  • Scanned Copies of academic titles

Appointment Duration

6 μήνες
CHINA-GREECE BELT AND ROAD JOINT LABORATORY ON CH CONSERVATION TECHNOLOGY
China-Greece Belt and Road Joint Laboratory on CH Conservation Technology
Start Date: 01/10/2020,     End Date: 01/10/2023

China-Greece Belt and Road Joint Laboratory on Cultural Heritage Conservation Technology

Research collaboration between IESL-FORTH and the Palace Museum within the Chinese National Key R&D Program Project “One Belt One Road: China-Greek Cultural Relics Protection Technology Joint Research” aims to construct a joint laser laboratory at the premises of the Palace Museum in Beijing.

 

CHINA-GREECE dialogues on Heritage Research and Conservation


The seminars are expected to present research work and experiences of CH scientists and experts from both countries, stimulate an exchange of ideas and strengthen collaboration links. ;

 

April 29-2022, DIALOGUE 01: Costas Vasiliadis – The Acropolis Museum
“The Erectheion Caryatids: Conservation Interventions and Removal of Pollution Encrustation by Means of Laser Technology”

 

June 24- 2022, DIALOGUE 02: Prof. Cunfeng Wei – Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
“The Applications and Prospects of the X-ray Imaging Technology in Cultural Relics”

 

September 28-2022, DIALOGUE 03: Elissavet KAVOULAKI, Ephorate of Antiquities of Heraklion, Crete, Greece
“Palace of Knossos: Conservation – restoration works and recent strategies within the HERACLES EU project”

 

November 24-2022, DIALOGUE 04: Andreas Germanos Karydas, NCSR “Demokritos”, Greece & CNR, -ISPC, Italy
“MA-XRF imaging of Greek Antiquities”.

 

December 14- 2022, DIALOGUE 05: Mr Guo Hong, University of Science and Technology Beijing, China
“Restoration research of Drepung Monastery murals in Tibet”

 

Principal Investigator

Dr. Pouli Paraskevi
Senior application Scientist
Prof. Anglos Demetrios
University Faculty Member

Scientific Staff

Prof. Sotiropoulou Sophia
University Faculty Member

Technical Staff

Mr. Hatzigiannakis Kostas
Technical Scientist
Ms. Melessanaki Kristalia
Technical Scientist
Mr. Andrianakis Michalis
Technical Scientist

Alumni

Dr. Giakoumaki Anastasia
Alumni
The Palace Museum, Department of Conservation Science

Mini Au/Pd sputtering (Quorum SC 7620)

Undefined

PhoHS Infrastructure and Portable Instrumentation

PhoHS Infrastructure and Portable Instrumentation 

Access provider: Photonics for Heritage Science, IESL, FORTH

Undefined
E-RIHS.GR THE GREEK NODE OF THE EUROPEAN RESEARCH INFRASTRUCTURE FOR HERITAGE SCIENCE
Start Date: 01/02/2017,     End Date: 30/09/2020

E-RIHS.gr is the Greek node of the European Research Infrastructure for Heritage Science, E-RIHS.
E-RIHS.gr offers

  1.  interdisciplinary access to novel scientific facilities and technologies, though standardized techniques and protocols, for the study, the documentation and the protection of Cultural  Heritage, and 
  2. to scientists and professionals related to Heritage science, advanced training on innovative methods for the analysis, diagnosis and conservation of CH objects and monuments.

 

E-RIHS.gr is the Greek cross-disciplinary Research Infrastructure (RI) in the service of Heritage Science (HS).

E-RIHS.gr exploits the expertise sourcing from the long term involvement of our partners in the field of research for HS, the know-how derived from the participation in numerous EU and National projects related to HS, as well as the leading infrastructures and state of the art instruments available in our laboratories, in order to deliver Innovative, Reliable and Efficient tools for addressing demanding  challenges in Cultural Heritage research.

Our concept is described in three words/terms:

Micro methods and tools appropriate for analytical studies of CH objects and materials, namely at the microscopic level.

These involve novel laser/spectroscopic techniques for compositional analysis and mapping of materials on works of art, advanced methods for studying archaeological DNA and also modern laser-based technologies for conservation and restoration.

Macro: Non-invasive geophysical and geochemical measurements for surveying and mapping macroscopically the landscape of archaeological and historical sites including underwater ones.

Info: Development and use of innovative management systems that enable efficient documentation and handling of new data and information enhancing our understanding about CH sites, monuments and objects.

 

-RIHS.gr, under the name IPERION-CH.gr, also participates in the Hellas-CH facility which is included in the Greek National Roadmap for Research Infrastructures.

E-RIHS will provide access to a wide range of cutting-edge scientific infrastructure, methodologies, data and tools, training in the use of these tools, public engagement, access to repositories for standardized data storage, analysis and interpretation. E-RIHS will enable the community to advance heritage science and global access to the distributed infrastructures in a coordinated and streamlined way.

E-RIHS.gr provides access services through three integrated platforms: 

 MOLAB  Mobile instruments for in-situ diagnostics - The MObile LABoratory allows  users to access state of the art mobile instrumentation for the study and diagnosis of valuable or immovable objects, archaeological sites and historical monuments.

FIXLAB  Access to advanced laboratories - The FIXed LABoratory provides access to leading infrastructures for sophisticated scientific investigations on samples or whole objects

DIGILAB Digital documentation &  management - The DIGItal LABoratory allows users  to exploit advanced databases for the documentation of their research and the handling of their data.

 

 

If you are interested to apply for E-RIHS access -  services

browse the E-rihs.gr application form :https://www.e-rihs.gr/contact/

Prof. Anglos Demetrios
University Faculty Member
Dr. Pouli Paraskevi
Senior application Scientist
Prof. Sotiropoulou Sophia
University Faculty Member

TriENA is a hybrid system that combines three spectroscopic analytical techniques (LIBS, LED-IF, and DR) in one portable device. It is a deliverable of the CALLOS project and has been developed at the Institute of Electronic Structure and Laser of FORTH by the Photonics for Heritage Science Researchers, in collaboration with the conservators of EACA. The system is designed to meet the analytical challenges commonly encountered on Athenian monuments.

This hybrid mobile system combines three spectroscopic techniques: Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS), Diffuse Reflectance Spectroscopy (DR), and LED-Induced Fluorescence (LED-IF), leading to an integrated characterization of the material under examination ‘in-situ’ with no sample removal or preparation restrictions. Moreover, the rapid data acquisition and the user-friendly software increase the system's applicability in archaeometry and art conservation.

LIBS offers a qualitative and semi-quantitative multi-elemental analysis, with its main advantage being the ability to perform stratigraphic analysis on a multi-layered object. The process involves focusing a compact Nd:YAG laser (1064 nm, pulse duration = 10 ns) on the object's surface using a lens, generating a micro-plasma. The emission from the micro-plasma is transmitted through a bifurcated optical fiber into a dual spectrometer unit (Avaspec-2048-2-USB2, Avantes) with a spectral range of 200 - 660 nm and a resolution of 0.2 - 0.3 nm. The analytical information is acquired within seconds.

Differential Reflectance (DR) and LED-Induced Fluorescence (LED-IF) provide information about the molecular composition of a material. DR is based on light absorption from the material, while LED-IF relies on fluorescence induced by a LED source. Both techniques are non-destructive, which makes them highly suitable for analyzing objects in cultural heritage and archaeology. A halogen tungsten lamp is used for the DR measurements, while for the LED-IF measurements, a LED source (375, 438, or 632 nm) excites the material. For DR measurements, a halogen tungsten lamp is used, while LED-IF measurements involve exciting the material with a LED source (375, 438, or 632 nm). To capture a wider range of spectra, the signals from DR and LED-IF are recorded using a low-resolution spectrometer (Avaspec-2048L-USB2, Avantes) with a spectral range of 200 - 1100 nm and a resolution of approximately 2.5 nm.

A miniature CCD camera provides a close-up view of the object's surface during analysis, allowing for precise aiming of the laser beam using a cross-hair indicator overlaid on the image. In addition, light sources, along with the required optics and a visualization camera, are integrated into a lightweight and compact optical probe head.

 

The LIBS microscope has the capacity to provide fast elemental mapping of flat surfaces, typically cross-sections of geological samples, marine shells, bones, teeth etc. The 2D-elemental maps of the scanned surface can be used to identify the distribution of mineral phases in rocks, to measure the variability of elemental proxies related to paleoenvironment in shell studies or to assess the diffusion of environmental pollutants into hard tissues. 

In the present micro-LIBS workstation a Q-switched Nd:YAG laser is used (λ = 1064 nm, pulse duration: 10 ns, pulse energy 5-20 mJ). The laser beam is focused on the sample through a laser objective lens down to a spot of 40 - 60 μm in diameter. The light emitted by the plasma is transferred via an optical fiber to the spectrometer which captures LIBS spectra for each one of the laser pulses that scans the surface. According to specific analysis requirements the spectral data is processed on-line or following completion of scanning. Samples are mounted on a motorized X–Y–Z micrometric stage and translated with respect to the laser beam that remains in a fixed position. The typical translation step is of the order of 100 μm. A CCD camera enables the user to have a clear view of the sample surface and to define the area that is to be mapped (any shape is acceptable). The measurement speed is about 0.9 s per point and each map could have 500 - 6000 points (i.e. an elemental map of 4000 points is obtained in about 1 hr). A dual spectrometer unit (AvaSpec-2048-2-USB2) records the LIBS signal (spectral range: 200 - 640 nm, resolution ~ 0.2 - 0.3 nm). For higher sensitivity, the signal can be recorded by a Czerny-Turner spectrometer (Jobin Yvon, TRIAX 320) with an ICCD camera (DH734–18F, Andor Technology) (spectral range ~ 45 nm).

Raman spectroscopy gives details about the molecular structure of samples on the basis of the characteristic vibrational modes of the molecule. It can be used to identify a variety of materials (minerals, pigments, organics etc.) and the fact that it is completely non-destructive makes it extremely attractive for the analysis of invaluable objects, such as artworks and archaeological objects.

Our mobile Raman microspectrometer (Exemplar Plus, ΒWTEK) uses a cw (continuous wave) diode laser working at 785 nm as excitation source. An optical probe head focusses the laser beam onto the sample surface by means of a set of objective lenses offering different levels of magnification. A white LED and a digital colour camera are included on the optical head, which allow visualization of the object’s surface and selection of the area (spot) to be analyzed. The spectrometer provides high spectral resolution (< 8 cm−1) and sensitivity, covering a spectral range between 100 – 3300 cm−1. The employed detector (Peltier-cooled) features high sensitivity with low dark counts.

 

IRIS-II, a portable MultiSpectral Imaging instrument, enables the compositional and structural study of multi-layered Cultural Heritage surfaces. It is fully portable enabling thus the examination of objects in situ (museums, conservation laboratories, archaeological areas etc.). This imaging system, provides detailed information related to the physical and chemical properties of materials, based on reflection and fluorescence spectroscopy.

The main elements of the multi-spectral imaging system include a camera, an imaging monochromator equipped with a filter wheel of 28 band-pass filters, the objective lens, electronics and a computer that controls all the components. The camera used on the system is a monochrome digital CMOS camera. The spatial resolution is 5MPixels, while the dynamic range applied is 8 bit. This sensor is sensitive from 350 nm up to 1200 nm. 

The whole system is designed to be portable and can be carried in a small case. 

Finally, custom-made software, entirely developed in LabView is employed. This software enables the control of the system and the data acquisition. Additional processing software for images normalization, calibration and analysis is also developed and used.

IESL-FORTH holds a number of laser systems with different wavelength, pulse duration and energy output characteristics available for laser cleaning investigations such as:

  • Transportable Q-switched Nd:YAG lasers (Quantel Q-smart 850, LITRON TRLi, Spectron SL-805 modified, Quanta Palladio, BMI 5022 DNS 10) emitting both nano- and pico-second (EKSPLA SL 312) laser pulses at various wavelengths (such as 1064, 532, 355, 266 & 213 nm)
  • Various excimer lasers emitting nano, pico and femto-second pulses in the UV
  • A patented transportable ns Nd:YAG system with dual-wavelength beam output, developed for the laser cleaning project of the Athens Acropolis Monuments especially dedicated to remove pollution crust from stonework without any discoloration or damage
  • A transportable LQS Nd:YAG system (ElEn, EOS1000) emitting IR pulses at longer pulse-widths
  • An Er:YAG laser system (LITRON NANO L 200-20-Er) emitting at 2094 nm 
  • A continuous CO2 laser system (Coherent Diamond C20) for the patented application related to the laser conservation of glazed objects.

Various workstations adaptable for different laser cleaning applications with the ability to integrate different optical and opto-mechanical components for the most appropriate beam delivery and control are available such as:

  • Handheld units (using a articulated mirrored arm) 
  • Automated beam scanning units for micrometer control and guidance of the laser beam to the sample (i.e. the painting surface).

The latter, a computer-driven mechanized component, can be adjusted on the basis of fluence values, spot size and pulse repetition rate enabling thus the homogeneous scanning of predefined areas.

Furthermore, a number of multi-modal diagnostic instruments for in-situ assessment of the cleaning result and monitoring of the laser ablation procedure are also availableThese can be selected according to the specifications of each individual cleaning case and may be one or more of the following:

  • Spectral Imaging to visualise the cleaning state
  • Laser-Induced Fluorescence (LIF) to evaluate the thinning of varnish
  • Vis-NIR Diffuse Reflectance spectroscopy to chemically characterise the irradiated surfaces

The DHSPI (Digital Holographic Speckle Pattern Interferometry) systems have been developed and continuously optimized at IESL-FORTH with the aim to investigate and monitor deformation, deterioration, and fracture mechanisms and thus to evaluate the structural condition of materials and systems as a result of ageing, mechanical alteration and materials’ failure.
DHSPI captures microscopic alterations of sub-surface topography on the basis of high-resolution interferometric imaging. Hidden defects are revealed as visible interference fringe patterns forming locally inhomogeneous intensity distribution patterns. The deformation data are extracted through the differential displacement of the surface under investigation and the deformation value is measured by multiples of half wavelength.

DHSPI-II, the most recent model, is a compact fully portable system with a built-in data acquisition and processing unit and dedicated user-friendly software, for the system control and data post-processing which enables real-time qualitative and quantitative structural diagnosis. DHSPI-II also allows control (via cable) from a remote pc (eg laptop) which provides extra flexibility for in-situ measurements. 

TECHNICAL INFO:  •Laser power: 300mW     •Coherence length: >30m     •CCD resolution: 5MP    •Spatial resolution: 144 lines/mm     •Displacement resolution: ≥ 266nm    •Sensor lens: C-Mount type exchangeable   •Beam Divergence: >40cm@1m (Gaussian Profile)  

 
E-RIHS - EUROPEAN RESEARCH INFRASTRUCTURE FOR HERITAGE SCIENCE
Start Date: 01/02/2017,     End Date: 30/09/2020

E-RIHS mission is to deliver integrated access to expertise, data and technologies through a standardized approach, and to integrate world-leading European facilities into an organisation with a clear identity and a strong cohesive role within the global heritage science community.

New instruments, new protocols and new techniques have a decisive impact on heritage science research, enabling improved understanding of heritage objects and sites. E-RIHS ERIC stimulates innovation in large-scale and medium-scale instrumentation, portable technologies and data science.

Through interdisciplinary access to the four platforms (E-RIHS ARCHLAB, E-RIHS DIGILAB, E-RIHS FIXLAB, E-RIHS MOLAB), E-RIHS ERIC supports a wide variety of research, from smaller object-focussed case studies, to large-scale and longer-term collaborative projects. Proposals for access are handled through a common entry point, their evaluation is based on excellence, following assessment by independent international peer review panels.

E-RIHS ERIC promotes good practices and develops or advances methods designed to respond to the specific needs of cultural heritage assets, whether material or digital: objects, collections, buildings and sites.

Vision

Fragmentation, duplication of efforts, isolation of small research groups put at risk the competitive advantage of European heritage science research, spearheaded so well in the past by its unique cultural heritage. The long‐term tradition of this field of research, the ability to combine science with innovation, and the support provided by EU‐funded projects and integrating activities such as EU‐ARTECH, CHARISMA and IPERION CH in conservation science, and ARIADNE in archaeology, represent the background of E-RIHS. E-RIHS exploits the synergy of the cooperation among the academy, research centres, museums and cultural institutions. Both the scientific and the socio‐economic importance connected with heritage science are nowadays evident. The research community has achieved the maturity necessary to make the leap towards a permanent European research infrastructure that will impact broadly on society and economy.

Objectives

E-RIHS is a distributed research infrastructure in the field of Heritage Science

What does it means? A distributed research infrastructure is an organization that enables the research community to use specific facilities, resources and services that are geographically scattered. E-RIHS gives access to facilities, resources and service in the field of Heritage Science across Europe.

E-RIHS will provide access to a wide range of cutting-edge scientific infrastructure, methodologies, data and tools, training in the use of these tools, public engagement, access to repositories for standardized data storage, analysis and interpretation. E-RIHS will enable the community to advance heritage science and global access to the distributed infrastructures in a coordinated and streamlined way.

E-RIHS will provide access services through four integrated platforms:

  • E-RIHS ARCHLAB (archives)  Access to specialised knowledge and organized scientific information – including technical images, analytical data and conservation documentation – in datasets largely unpublished from archives of prestigious European museums, galleries and research institutions.

  • E-RIHS DIGILAB (virtual facilities)  Virtual access to scientific data concerning tangible heritage, making them FAIR (Findable-Accessible-Interoperable-Reusable). It includes searchable registries of multidimensional images, analytical data and documentation from large academic as well as research and heritage institutions.

  • E-RIHS FIXLAB (fixed facilities) Access to large‐scale and medium-scale facilities (particle accelerators and synchrotrons, neutron sources; non-transportable analytical instruments) offering a unique expertise to users in the heritage field, for sophisticated scientific investigations on samples or whole objects, revealing their microstructure and chemical composition, giving essential and invaluable insights into historical technologies, materials, alteration and degradation phenomena or authenticity.

  • E-RIHS MOLAB (mobile facilities) Access to an impressive array of advanced mobile analytical instrumentation for non‐ invasive measurements on valuable or immovable objects, archaeological sites and historical monuments. The MObile LABoratory allows its users to implement complex multi‐technique diagnostic projects, permitting the most effective in situ investigations.

 

If you are interested in ongoing access calls, browse the IPERION HS catalogue of services:
http://www.iperionhs.eu/catalogue-of-services/

If you are interested in ongoing access calls,browse the IPERION HS catalogue of services:
http://www.iperionhs.eu/catalogue-of-services/  

for more info on how to access browse : https://www.iperionhs.eu/iperion-hsaccess/

E-RIHS national hubs

National hubs operate at national level in diverse legal frameworks and represent national associations of partner facilities.
National hubs reinforce the commitment of the E-RIHS community to create and enlarge a pan-European research infrastructure.

Currently, the national hubs sharing the objectives of E-RIHS are active in Belgium, CyprusDenmark, France, Germany, GreeceHungaryItalyMaltaThe NetherlandsPolandPortugalRomaniaSpainSloveniaSweden and United Kingdom.

At the moment, 24 national nodes including partners beyond Europe are participating in the H2020 project IPERION HS (Integrating Platform for the European Research Infrastructure on Heritage Science), funded by the European Commission under G.A. 871034.

Funding frameworks history

Prof. Anglos Demetrios
University Faculty Member
Dr. Pouli Paraskevi
Senior application Scientist
Prof. Sotiropoulou Sophia
University Faculty Member

ELITE Thermal Systems Limited TMH12/75/750

Programmable horizontal tube (3”) furnaces up to 1200°C  (ELITE Thermal Systems Limited TMH12/75/750)

Undefined

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