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Goodbye, Titan!

UPDATE: June 2, 2025

Thank you for celebrating the Titan with us!

We want to extend a heartfelt thank you to everyone who joined us for the this event! Your presence, stories, and enthusiasm made it a truly special sendoff to one of AIF’s most beloved instruments.

From incredible memories to inspiring conversations, the energy in the room was a powerful reminder of the legacy the Titan leaves behind.

Whether you worked directly with the Titan or just came to honor its contribution to research and innovation, we’re so grateful you were there. Here’s to the future of new and improved equipment at the AIF! 🐺

After over a decade of enabling groundbreaking research, the time has come to bid farewell to our beloved Thermo Fisher Scientific Aberration Corrected Titan 80-300, which will be decommissioned in May 2025.

Installed in 2012, the Titan quickly became a cornerstone of AIF. With its aberration-corrected electron optics for sub-angstrom resolution, monochromator for high energy resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy, ChemiSTEM for fast, high-resolution EDS mapping, EMPAD detector for 4D-STEM, and OneView camera for high-speed imaging enabled an era of imaging and analysis that redefined what was possible at the atomic scale. For many researchers, it was not just a piece of equipment—it was a trusted partner in their journey of materials research and discovery.

Over the years, this instrument contributed to hundreds of projects, spanning microelectronics, metallurgy, ceramics, nanotechnology, catalysis, and beyond. From revealing the exact placement of dopants in semiconductors to mapping strain in two-dimensional materials, its capabilities transformed the questions we could ask—and answer.

The Titan was instrumental to my research career, enabling fundamental insights into complex materials that would have otherwise remained out of reach. Beyond its scientific contributions, this instrument played a key role in the economic development of North Carolina—through the students it helped train who remained in the region, and through fruitful collaborations with industry partners such as Protochips, Adroit, and Wolfspeed, to name a few. I am deeply grateful to the staff of the Analytical Instrumentation Facility for their expert stewardship of the Titan over the years—their dedication made these achievements possible. I have no doubt that the new Spectra will be equally well supported, and will continue this legacy of excellence for years to come.”
– Jim LeBeau, former MSE professor and AIF associate director at NC State, now MSE professor at MIT

In the coming months, we’re excited to welcome the next-generation Thermo Fisher Spectra UltraSTEM. But before we look ahead, we take a moment to honor a true giant in our lab’s history—quietly powerful, endlessly precise, and deeply appreciated.

Join us in the Titan lab (MRC room 122) on May 2nd between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. to bid farewell, snap a final photo, or simply reconnect with the TEM support team and reminisce about the good old days.