35 research outputs found
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Electrical Contacts to Individual Colloidal Semiconductor Nanorods
We report the results of charge transport studies on single CdTe nanocrystals contacted via evaporated Pd electrodes. Device charging energy, E{sub c}, monitored as a function of electrode separation drops suddenly at separations below {approx}55 nm. This drop can be explained by chemical changes induced by the metal electrodes. This explanation is corroborated by ensemble X-Ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) studies of CdTe films as well as single particle measurements by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and energy dispersive X-Rays (EDX). Similar to robust optical behavior obtained when Nanocrystals are coated with a protective shell, we find that a protective SiO2 layer deposited between the nanocrystal and the electrode prevents interface reactions and an associated drop in E{sub c,max}. This observation of interface reactivity and its effect on electrical properties has important implications for the integration of nanocrystals into conventional fabrication techniques and may enable novel nano-materials
Synthesis, Contact Printing, and Device Characterization of Ni-Catalyzed, Crystalline InAs Nanowires
InAs nanowires have been actively explored as the channel material for high
performance transistors owing to their high electron mobility and ease of ohmic
metal contact formation. The catalytic growth of non-epitaxial InAs nanowires,
however, has often relied on the use of Au colloids which is non-CMOS
compatible. Here, we demonstrate the successful synthesis of high yield of
crystalline InAs nanowires with high yield and tunable diameters by using Ni
nanoparticles as the catalyst material on amorphous SiO2 substrates. The
nanowires show superb electrical properties with field-effect electron mobility
~2,700 cm2/Vs and ION/IOFF >103. The uniformity and purity of the grown InAs
nanowires are further demonstrated by large-scale assembly of parallel arrays
of nanowires on substrates via the contact printing process that enables high
performance, printable transistors, capable of delivering 5-10 mA ON currents
(~400 nanowires).Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures included, all in .docx format. Nano Research (In
Press
Structure vs. properties chirality, optics and shapes in amphiphilic porphyrin J-aggregates
The structure of the meso-tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin (TPPS4) J-aggregates could be determined by X-ray and electron diffraction methods. A sheet-like architecture reveals the relationship between structure and chirality, optics and shapes of the J-aggregate of the meso 4-sulfonatophenyl- and phenyl- substituted porphyrins. The structure of the J-aggregates of H4TPPS4 belongs to the chiral space group P21 and includes four porphyrin molecules in its unit cell. The intermolecular stabilization of the zwitterionic units by hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interactions between the positively charged central NH groups and the periphery anionic sulfonato groups results in a structure of porphyrins sheets along the [ ] plane direction. The structure of the sheet on the [ ] plane is already chiral and its molecular architecture explains the simultaneous presence of H- and J-aggregate bands in their absorption spectra. This structure also accounts for the high similarity observed between the absorption spectra of different mesophorms of the same substance and even between different members of the series of meso-4-sulfonatophenyl-and-aryl substituted diprotonated porphyrins. The possibility, or not, of the sheet-like structure on [ ] to interact with other layers, either through ionic or hydrophobic interactions, depends on the substitution pattern at the meso-positions of the porphyrin ring. Thus, the different morphologies of the particles [mono- bi- and multilayered] of this series of J-aggregates are explained taking into account the role that the fourth meso-subtituent plays in the interlayer stabilization. The results suggest that supramolecular helicity, previously detected in several J-aggregates, is not the explanation of their chirality but would be the expression of the intrinsic chirality of the packing between building blocks
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Photoinduced Charge Transfer and Trapping on Single Gold Metal Nanoparticles on TiO2
We present a study of the effect of gold nanoparticles (Au NPs) on TiO2 on charge generation and trapping during illumination with photons of energy larger than the substrate band gap. We used a novel characterization technique, photoassisted Kelvin probe force microscopy, to study the process at the single Au NP level. We found that the photoinduced electron transfer from TiO2 to the Au NP increases logarithmically with light intensity due to the combined contribution of electron-hole pair generation in the space charge region in the TiO2-air interface and in the metal-semiconductor junction. Our measurements on single particles provide direct evidence for electron trapping that hinders electron-hole recombination, a key factor in the enhancement of photo(electro)catalytic activity.This work was supported by the Office of Basic Energy
Sciences (BES) of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
under contract DE-AC02-05CH11231 through the Structure
and Dynamics of Materials Interfaces Program (FWP
KC31SM) and the Molecular Foundry. M.L. acknowledges
funds from Comunidad de Madrid (P2018/EMT-4308), a
Fulbright grant PRX16/00564, and the MCIU-AEI-FEDERUE
(RTI2018-096937-B-C22 and MAT2014-59772-C2-1-P).
J.C. acknowledges financial support from Ministerio de Ciencia
e Innovación (MICINN) and the European Union through the
project PID2019-104272RB-C52. Also, Y.H. acknowledges
financial support from MCIU through MAT2014-59772-C2-2-
P and L.M. from EC through ERC-2013-SYG-610256.
V.A.P.O. and M.B. acknowledge the financial support from
EC through ERC CoG HyMAP 648319, MINECO PID2019-
106315RB-I00 and ENE2017-89170-R, ″Comunidad de
Madrid″ and European Structural Funds (FotoArt-CM project S2018/NMT-4367) and Fundación Ramón Areces (Art-Leaf
project). M.B. also thanks the Juan de la Cierva Incorporación
contract (IJC2019042430-I). X.Z. was supported by the
NSF-BSF 359 grant number 1906014. The authors thank Prof.
Eran Edri, MarÃa Ujué González Sagardoy, and Judit Meseguer-
Oliver for fruitful discussions and Asylum customer support for
help with modifications of the AFM
Effect of proteoglycans at interfaces as related to location, architecture, and mechanical cues.
IntroductionCovalently bound functional GAGs orchestrate tissue mechanics through time-dependent characteristics.ObjectiveThe role of specific glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) at the ligament-cementum and cementum-dentin interfaces within a human periodontal complex were examined. Matrix swelling and resistance to compression under health and modeled diseased states was investigated.Materials and methodsThe presence of keratin sulfate (KS) and chondroitin sulfate (CS) GAGs at the ligament-cementum and cementum-dentin interfaces in human molars (N=5) was illustrated by using enzymes, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and AFM-based nanoindentation. The change in physical characteristics of modeled diseased states through sequential digestion of keratin sulfate (KS) and chondroitin sulfate (CS) GAGs was investigated. One-way ANOVA tests with P<0.05 were performed to determine significant differences between groups. Additionally, the presence of mineral within the seemingly hygroscopic interfaces was investigated using transmission electron microscopy.ResultsImmunohistochemistry (N=3) indicated presence of biglycan and fibromodulin small leucine rich proteoglycans at the interfaces. Digestion of matrices with enzymes confirmed the presence of KS and CS GAGs at the interfaces by illustrating a change in tissue architecture and mechanics. A significant increase in height (nm), decrease in elastic modulus (GPa), and tissue deformation rate (nm/s) of the PDL-C attachment site (215±63-424±94nm; 1.5±0.7-0.4±0.2GPa; 21±7-48±22nm/s), and cementum-dentin interface (122±69-360±159nm; 2.9±1.3-0.7±0.3GPa; 18±4-30±6nm/s) was observed.ConclusionsThe sequential removal of GAGs indicated loss in intricate structural hierarchy of hygroscopic interfaces. From a mechanics perspective, GAGs provide tissue recovery/resilience. The results of this study provide insights into the role of GAGs toward conserved tooth movement in the socket in response to mechanical loads, and modulation of potentially deleterious strain at tissue interfaces
Immunotargeting of Nanocrystals by SpyCatcher Conjugation of Engineered Antibodies
Inorganic nanocrystals such as quantum dots (QDs) and upconverting nanoparticles (UCNPs) are uniquely suited for quanti-tative live-cell imaging and are typically functionalized with ligands to study specific receptors or cellular targets. Antibod-ies (Ab) are among the most useful targeting reagents owing to their high affinities and specificities, but common nanocrys-tal labeling methods may orient Ab incorrectly, be reversible or denaturing, or lead to Ab-NP complexes too large for some applications. Here, we show that SpyCatcher proteins, which bind and spontaneously form covalent isopeptide bonds with cognate SpyTag peptides, can conjugate engineered Ab to nanoparticle surfaces with control over stability, orientation, and stoichiometry. Compact SpyCatcher-functionalized QDs and UCNPs may be labeled with short-chain variable fragment Ab (scFv) engineered to bind urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptors (uPAR) that are overexpressed in many human can-cers. Confocal imaging of anti-uPAR scFv-QD conjugates shows the Ab mediates specific binding and internalization by breast cancer cells expressing uPAR. Time-lapse imaging of photostable scFv-UCNP conjugates show that Ab binding caus-es uPAR internalization with a ∼20-minute half-life on the cell surface, and uPAR is internalized to endolysosomal com-partments distinct from general membrane stains and without significant recycling to the cell surface. The controlled and stable conjugation of engineered Ab to NPs enables targeting of diverse receptors for live-cell study of their distribution, trafficking, and physiology