Herzan Helps Researchers Remove Environmental Noise from Their Measurements Through its Acoustic, Vibration, and EMI Isolation Solutions.
Acoustic, Vibration, and EMI Isolation
Vibration Isolation
Achieve Max Resolution With A Vibration Isolation System
For over 25 years, Herzan has been helping researchers achieve more from their research by removing disruptive vibration noise from affecting their instrument. Vibration noise can cause distortions to occur in imaging, making understanding data collected less precise.
Herzan vibration isolation systems help attenuate noise found in imaging, whereby maximizing the quality of data collected for a wide range of instruments and applications.
Atomic Force Microscope Supported By A TS Series Table
“Simply put, our experiments would not be possible without the equipment from Herzan. It allows us to do even single-molecule experiments on the second floor of a shaky building!” – Professor Volkmar Heinrich, UC Davis
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Herzan has partnered with customers around the world to share their experiences highlighting how they were able to eliminate troublesome environmental noise and maximize the utility of their instrumentation by partnering with Herzan to define a solution.
UHV STM + AVI Series
Researchers at the School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences at Newcastle University were facing limitations in the performance of their Omicron Variable Temperature UHV-STM. They had determined that vibrations from a nearby highway were preventing them from using the instrument
The Nano-Bio Lab at the University of Texas at Dallas saw vibration noise not being isolated by their optical table. As a result, they turned to the TS-150 vibration isolation table as a solution to help remove the low-frequency vibration noise from limiting their research.
The Zewail Group operating a Quanta FEG 650 interfaced with a custom optical set-up to enable ultrafast electron microscopy imaging. Feeding laser into SEM chamber requires positional stability within a few micrometers, so SEM internal air isolation was not in use.
Researchers at Boston University were in search of isolating mechanical noise from a custom metrology platform consisting of a MEMs accelerometer, which was re-purposed to perform a sensitive, room temperature measurement of the Casimir force.