| Published
July 20, 2004 |
Volume
12, Number 7
|
Gatan Makes Electron Microscopes More
Powerful Than Ever

|
| Gatan's president
and CEO Bob Buchanan shows an electron microscope which has been fitted
with Gatan's components. |
By George Walsh
Special to NETWORK
Nearly every device that we use in our daily lives or professions can
be enhanced in some way. Whether it’s a faster processor for your home
computer or an electronic device that makes the anti-lock brakes on
your car safer, it’s likely that some company somewhere is working hard
to squeeze that extra bit of performance out of our modern-day tools.
In the world of electron microscopes, one of these companies is Gatan
Inc., at 5933 Coronado Lane.
Founded in 1964, Gatan, Inc. is a manufacturer of instrumentation and
software used to enhance and extend the operation and performance of
electron microscopes. Gatan's products, which are compatible with all
brands of electron microscopes, cover the entire range of the
analytical process from specimen preparation and manipulation to
imaging and analysis. The company’s customer base spans end users of
analytical instrumentation typically found in industrial, governmental,
and academic laboratories. The applications addressed by these
scientists and researchers include metallurgy, semiconductors,
electronics, biological science, new materials research, and
biotechnology.
“There are two types of electron microscopes,” says Bob Buchanan,
president and CEO of Gatan. “The first is the transmission electron
microscope (TEN), which looks through very thin samples. The second
type is the scanning electron microscope (SEN), which is used to look
at the surface of objects. We make accessories for both types of
microscopes, although probably 80%-90% of our products are targeted at
TENs.”
The accessory equipment Gatan makes includes CCD (charged-coupled
device) cameras (which replace film by registering tiny electric
charges on silicon chips); specimen preparation equipment used in
transmission and scanning electron microscopes; and specimen holders
for TENs that allow users to heat, cool, stretch, or tilt specimens
depending on the model. In addition, Gatan makes what are known as
electron energy loss spectrometers for SENs that are used to provide
elemental information about samples in specific parts of it, as well as
enough other high-end add-ons for both SENs and TENs to boggle the
minds of most laymen. These tools, however, are of invaluable use to
those who need them for their work.
“Our customers are mainly universities, government research facilities,
and industrial companies in areas like the semiconductor industry. Our
products basically address material science and biological
applications,” Buchanan says. However, in the ever-shrinking world of
electrical components, these devices will play an exciting role.
“Electron microscopes now allow people to look at atoms, which is
important as we move toward nanotechnology,” Buchanan says.
Nanotechnology is the branch of engineering that deals with things
smaller than 100 nanometers. (Nanometers are one billionth of a meter
in size.)
Gatan is part of a larger company called Roper Industries that is
traded on the NYSE. Gatan’s headquarters, including research and
development and sales and marketing, are located in Hacienda. The
manufacturing operation is located in Warrendale, Penn., with other
development operations in Oxford, England and offices and dealers
throughout the world. Currently, Gatan has 60 employees at Hacienda and
a total of 200 worldwide.
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