About Us

NAno-RAMAN Molecular Imaging Laboratory

Professor Gordon Taylor, Tatiana Zaliznyak (NARMIL Tech) and Luis Medina Faull (PhD student) with Raman microspectrometer, atomic force microscope and control center [photo credit: John Griffin].

Our Facility

The NAno-RAMAN Molecular Imaging Laboratory (NARMIL) hosted by the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS) was established in January 2014 through the NSF Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) program. The facility, located in Endeavour Hall 170, supports research in marine, atmospheric, environmental, biological, chemical, geological, materials sciences, and biomedical engineering, but is open to other applications as well. The lab provides state-of-the-art instrumentation and expertise for analyses of single cells, aerosols, natural and engineered surfaces, minerals, biofilms, thin films, and novel synthetic materials. The lab’s vision is to offer unique analytical solutions to chronic limitations experienced in many research areas, to enable transformative discoveries, and to educate the next generation of scientists.

NARMIL is home to a Renishaw inVia Confocal Raman Microspectrometer and a Bruker Innova Atomic Force Microscope. These instruments can be operated independently or coupled for co-localization and Tip-enhanced Raman Scattering (TERS) and offer high performance, reliability, modular design, and user-friendly operating systems. The entire system is mounted on a floating 5’x8′ Newport INTEGRITY 3 vibration isolation table.

People

Gordon T. Taylor, Director of NARMIL: Professor of Oceanography School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University

Daniel A. Knopf, Associate Director of NARMIL: Professor of Atmospheric Sciences School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University

Tatiana (Tanya) Zaliznyak, NARMIL Facility Specialist: School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University