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1.
Opt Express ; 32(3): 4485-4497, 2024 Jan 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38297649

ABSTRACT

Fluorescent (FL) encrypting nanostructures, such as quantum dots, carbon dots, organic dyes, lanthanide nanocrystals, DNA, and more, are effective tools for advanced applications in high-resolution hidden imaging. These applications include tracking, labeling, security printing, and anti-counterfeiting drug technology. In this work, what we believe to be a new FL encoding nanostructures has been proposed, which consists of recently discovered nanometer-scale peptide dots. When refolded into a beta-sheet peptide secondary structure, these biocompatible nanoparticles exhibit a strong and tunable FL effect. The biophotonic FL covers the entire visible spectrum, making the peptide dots next-generation nanoscale light sources with a quantum yield of 30%. Our studies demonstrate that these FL bio-nanodots also exhibit a significant irreversible photo-bleaching effect associated with the light-induced destruction of noncovalent intermolecular hydrogen bonds of the peptide dots' highly stable beta-sheet secondary structure. We present what we believe is a new approach for achieving high-resolution long-term optical memory by tailoring various hidden images in the developed thin polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) polymer films with an embedded dense array of FL peptide nanodots. The technology enables recording photo-bleached patterns, barcodes, and high-resolution images.


Subject(s)
Nanoparticles , Quantum Dots , Polymers , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Quantum Dots/chemistry , Peptides , Coloring Agents , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry
2.
J Pept Sci ; 25(5): e3164, 2019 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30900328

ABSTRACT

Basic optical properties of bioinspired peptide nanostructures are deeply modified by thermally mediated refolding of peptide secondary structure from α-helical to ß-sheet. This conformational transition is followed by the appearance in the ß-sheet structures of a wideband optical absorption and fluorescence in the visible region. We demonstrate that a new biophotonic effect of optical waveguiding recently observed in peptide/protein nanoensembles is a structure-sensitive bimodal phenomenon. In the primary α-helical structure input, light propagates via optical transmission window demonstrating conventional passive waveguiding, based on classical optics. In the ß-sheet structure, fluorescent (active) light waveguiding is revealed. The latter can be attributed to completely different physical mechanism of exciton-polariton propagation, characterized by high effective refractive index, and can be observed in nanoscale fibers below diffraction limit. It has been shown that peptide material requirements for passive and active waveguiding are dissimilar. Original biocompatibility and biodegradability indicate high potential future applications of these bioinspired waveguiding materials in precise photobiomedicine towards advanced highly selective bioimaging, photon diagnostics, and optogenetics.


Subject(s)
Light , Nanostructures/chemistry , Peptides/chemistry , Fluorescence , Optical Imaging , Particle Size , Surface Properties
3.
J Phys Chem A ; 123(9): 1758-1765, 2019 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30753080

ABSTRACT

We employ molecular dynamics (MD) and time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) to explore the fluorescence of hydrogen-bonded dimer and trimer structures of cyclic FF (Phe-Phe) molecules. We show that in some of these configurations a photon can induce either an intra-molecular proton transfer, or an inter-molecular proton transfer that can occur in the excited S1 and S2 states. This proton transfer, taking place within the hydrogen bond, leads to a significant red-shift that can explain the experimentally observed visible fluorescence in biological and bioinspired peptide nanostructures with a ß-sheet biomolecular arrangement. Finally, we also show that such proton transfer is highly sensitive to the geometrical bonding of the dimers and trimers and that it occurs only in specific configurations allowed by the formation of hydrogen bonds.


Subject(s)
Density Functional Theory , Fluorescence , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Peptides/chemical synthesis , Protons , Hydrogen Bonding , Peptides/chemistry
4.
Small ; 14(34): e1801147, 2018 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30027685

ABSTRACT

Optical waveguiding phenomena found in bioinspired chemically synthesized peptide nanostructures are a new paradigm which can revolutionize emerging fields of precise medicine and health monitoring. A unique combination of their intrinsic biocompatibility with remarkable multifunctional optical properties and developed nanotechnology of large peptide wafers makes them highly promising for new biomedical light therapy tools and implantable optical biochips. This Review highlights a new field of peptide nanophotonics. It covers peptide nanotechnology and the fabrication process of peptide integrated optical circuits, basic studies of linear and nonlinear optical phenomena in biological and bioinspired nanostructures, and their passive and active optical waveguiding. It is shown that the optical properties of this generation of bio-optical materials are governed by fundamental biological processes. Refolding the peptide secondary structure is followed by wideband optical absorption and visible tunable fluorescence. In peptide optical waveguides, such a bio-optical effect leads to switching from passive waveguiding mode in native α-helical phase to an active one in the ß-sheet phase. The found active waveguiding effect in ß-sheet fiber structures below optical diffraction limit opens an avenue for the future development of new bionanophotonics in ultrathin peptide/protein fibrillar structures toward advanced biomedical nanotechnology.


Subject(s)
Microarray Analysis , Nanostructures/chemistry , Optical Phenomena , Peptides/chemistry , Precision Medicine , Nanotechnology
5.
J Pept Sci ; 23(2): 95-103, 2017 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27966267

ABSTRACT

Small-scale optical devices, designed and fabricated onto one dielectric substrate, create integrated optical chip like their microelectronic analogues. These photonic circuits, based on diverse physical phenomena such as light-matter interaction, propagation of electromagnetic waves in a thin dielectric material, nonlinear and electro-optical effects, allow transmission, distribution, modulation, and processing of optical signals in optical communication systems, chemical and biological sensors, and more. The key component of these optical circuits providing both optical processing and photonic interconnections is light waveguides. Optical confinement and transmitting of the optical waves inside the waveguide material are possible due to the higher refractive index of the waveguides in comparison with their surroundings. In this work, we propose a novel field of bionanophotonics based on a new concept of optical waveguiding in synthetic elongated peptide nanostructures composed of ordered peptide dipole biomolecules. New technology of controllable deposition of peptide optical waveguiding structures by nanofountain pen technique is developed. Experimental studies of refractive index, optical transparency, and linear and nonlinear waveguiding in out-of-plane and in-plane diphenylalanine peptide nanotubes have been conducted. Optical waveguiding phenomena in peptide structures are simulated by the finite difference time domain method. The advantages of this new class of bio-optical waveguides are high refractive index contrast, wide spectral range of optical transparency, large optical nonlinearity, and electro-optical effect, making them promising for new applications in integrated multifunctional photonic circuits. Copyright © 2016 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Subject(s)
Nanotechnology/methods , Nanotubes, Peptide/chemistry , Optical Tweezers , Optics and Photonics/methods , Phenylalanine/analogs & derivatives , Dipeptides , Equipment Design , Humans , Light , Nanotechnology/instrumentation , Nanotubes, Peptide/ultrastructure , Optical Fibers , Optics and Photonics/instrumentation , Phenylalanine/chemistry , Refractometry
6.
Langmuir ; 32(12): 2847-62, 2016 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26496411

ABSTRACT

A reconstructive phase transition has been found and studied in ultrashort di- and tripeptide nanostructures, self-assembled from biomolecules of different compositions and origin such as aromatic, aliphatic, linear, and cyclic (linear FF-diphenylalanine, linear LL-dileucine, FFF-triphenylalanine, and cyclic FF-diphenylalanine). The native linear aromatic FF, FFF and aliphatic LL peptide nanoensembles of various shapes (nanotubes and nanospheres) have asymmetric elementary structure and demonstrate nonlinear optical and piezoelectric effects. At elevated temperature, 140-180 °C, these native supramolecular structures (except for native Cyc-FF nanofibers) undergo an irreversible thermally induced transformation via reassembling into a completely new thermodynamically stable phase having nanowire morphology similar to those of amyloid fibrils. This reconstruction process is followed by deep and similar modification at all levels: macroscopic (morphology), molecular, peptide secondary, and electronic structures. However, original Cyc-FF nanofibers preserve their native physical properties. The self-fabricated supramolecular fibrillar ensembles exhibit the FTIR and CD signatures of new antiparallel ß-sheet secondary folding with intermolecular hydrogen bonds and centrosymmetric structure. In this phase, the ß-sheet nanofibers, irrespective of their native biomolecular origin, do not reveal nonlinear optical and piezoelectric effects, but do exhibit similar profound modification of optoelectronic properties followed by the appearance of visible (blue and green) photoluminescence (PL), which is not observed in the original peptides and their native nanostructures. The observed visible PL effect, ascribed to hydrogen bonds of thermally induced ß-sheet secondary structures, has the same physical origin as that of the fluorescence found recently in amyloid fibrils and can be considered to be an optical signature of ß-sheet structures in both biological and bioinspired materials. Such PL centers represent a new class of self-assembled dyes and can be used as intrinsic optical labels in biomedical microscopy as well as for a new generation of novel optoelectronic nanomaterials for emerging nanophotonic applications, such as biolasers, biocompatible markers, and integrated optics.


Subject(s)
Oligopeptides/chemistry , Dipeptides/chemistry , Fluorescence , Nanostructures , Phase Transition , Phenylalanine/analogs & derivatives , Phenylalanine/chemistry , Protein Structure, Secondary , Temperature
7.
J Pept Sci ; 20(7): 487-93, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24895323

ABSTRACT

Thermally induced phase transformation in bioorganic nanotubes, which self-assembled from two ultrashort dipeptides of different origin, aromatic diphenylalanine (FF) and aliphatic dileucine (LL), is studied. In both FF and LL nanotubes, irreversible phase transformation found at 120-180 °C is governed by linear-to-cyclic dipeptide molecular modification followed by formation of extended ß-sheet structure. As a result of this process, native open-end FF and LL nanotubes are transformed into ultrathin nanofibrils. Found deep reconstructions at all levels from macroscopic (morphology) and structural space symmetry to molecular give rise to new optical properties in both aromatic FF and aliphatic LL nanofibrils and generation of blue photoluminescence (PL) emission. It is shown that observed blue PL peak is similar in these supramolecular nanofibrillar structures and is excited by the network of non-covalent hydrogen bonds that link newly thermally induced neighboring cyclic dipeptide strands to final extended ß-sheet structure of amyloid-like nanofibrils. The observed blue PL peak in short dipeptide nanofibrils is similar to the blue PL peak that was recently found in amyloid fibrils and can be considered as the optical signature of ß-sheet structures. Nanotubular structures were characterized by environmental scanning electron microscope, ToF-secondary ion mass spectroscopy, CD and fluorescence spectroscopy.


Subject(s)
Dipeptides/chemistry , Nanofibers/chemistry , Nanotubes/chemistry , Phenylalanine/analogs & derivatives , Hydrogen Bonding , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Nanofibers/ultrastructure , Nanotubes/ultrastructure , Phase Transition , Phenylalanine/chemistry , Protein Structure, Quaternary , Protein Structure, Secondary
8.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 419(2): 232-7, 2012 Mar 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22333569

ABSTRACT

Insulin, as other amyloid proteins, can form amyloid fibrils at certain conditions. The self-assembled aggregation process of insulin can result in a variety of conformations, starting from small oligomers, going through various types of protofibrils, and finishing with bundles of fibrils. One of the most common consensuses among the various self-assembly processes that are suggested in the literature is the formation of an early stage nucleus conformation. Here we present an additional insight for the self-assembly process of insulin. We show that at the early lag phase of the process (prior to fibril formation) the insulin monomers self-assemble into ordered nanostructures. The most notable feature of this early self-assembly process is the formation of nanocrystalline nucleus regions with a strongly bound electron-hole confinement, which also change the secondary structure of the protein. Each step in the self-assembly process is characterized by an optical spectroscopic signature, and possesses a narrow size distribution. By following the spectroscopic signature we can measure the potency of amyloid fibrils inhibitors already at the lag phase. We further demonstrate it by the use of epigallocatechin gallate, a known inhibitor for insulin fibrils. The findings can result in a spectroscopic-based application for the analysis of amyloid fibrils inhibitors.


Subject(s)
Amyloid/chemistry , Insulin/chemistry , Amyloid/antagonists & inhibitors , Amyloid/ultrastructure , Catechin/analogs & derivatives , Catechin/chemistry , Circular Dichroism , Crystallization , Humans , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Protein Conformation , Spectrometry, Fluorescence
9.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 14(18): 6391-408, 2012 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22460950

ABSTRACT

The emerging "bottom-up" nanotechnology reveals a new field of bioinspired nanomaterials composed of chemically synthesized biomolecules. They are formed from elementary constituents in supramolecular structures by the use of a developed nature self-assembly mechanism. The focus of this perspective paper is on intrinsic fundamental physical properties of bioinspired peptide nanostructures and their small building units linked by weak noncovalent bonds. The observed exceptional optical properties indicate a phenomenon of quantum confinement in these supramolecular structures, which originates from nanoscale size of their elementary building blocks. The dimensionality of the confinement gives insight into intrinsic packing of peptide supramolecular nanomaterials. QC regions, revealed in bioinspired nanostructures, were found by us in amyloid fibrils formed from insulin protein. We describe ferroelectric and related properties found at the nanoscale based on original crystalline asymmetry of the nanoscale building blocks, packing these structures. In this context, we reveal a classic solid state physics phenomenon such as reconstructive phase transition observed in bioorganic peptide nanotubes. This irreversible phase transformation leads to drastic reshaping of their quantum structure from quantum dots to quantum wells, which is followed by variation of their space group symmetry from asymmetric to symmetric. We show that the supramolecular origin of these bioinspired nanomaterials provides them a unique chance to be disassembled into elementary building block peptide nanodots of 1-2 nm size possessing unique electronic, optical and ferroelectric properties. These multifunctional nanounits could lead to a new future step in nanotechnology and nanoscale advanced devices in the fields of nanophotonics, nanobiomedicine, nanobiopiezotronics, etc.


Subject(s)
Nanostructures/chemistry , Nanotechnology/methods , Peptides/chemistry , Physical Phenomena , Animals , Electrons , Humans , Quantum Theory
10.
Biomacromolecules ; 12(4): 1349-54, 2011 Apr 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21388228

ABSTRACT

Phase transitions in organic and inorganic materials are well-studied classical phenomena, where a change in the crystal space group symmetry induces a wide variation of physical properties, permitted by the crystalline symmetry in each phase. Here we observe a conformational induced transition in bioinspired peptide nanotubes (PNTs). We found that the PNTs change their original molecular assembly from a linear peptide conformation to a cyclic one, followed by a change of the nanocrystalline structure from a noncentrosymmetric hexagonal space group to a centrosymmetric orthorhombic space group. The observed transition is irreversible and induces a profound variation in the PNTs properties, from the microscopic to the macroscopic level. In this context, we follow the unique changes in the molecular, morphological, piezoelectric, second harmonic generation, and wettability properties of the PNTs.


Subject(s)
Nanotubes , Peptides/chemistry , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning Transmission , Thermogravimetry , Wettability , X-Ray Diffraction
11.
J Nanosci Nanotechnol ; 11(10): 9282-6, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22400337

ABSTRACT

Peptide nanotubes (PNTs) have become a significant subject at the biological and bionanotechnology field. Here we describe the spectroscopic analysis of PNTs coatings, which were deposited by a physical vapor deposition technology. We show that we can adjust the electronic, and consequently the spectroscopic, photoluminescence (PL) properties of the PNT coatings, simply by changing the parameters of the PNT deposition. We show that by controlling the PNT deposition parameters we can observe different PL properties of the PNT coatings and significantly strengthen the PL in the visible blue region. We further explain that the strong blue emission is resulting from the conversion of the monomers to a different chemical structure. The strong blue emission, and our ability to adjust it, promotes the use of the PNTs as organic materials for light emitting devices.


Subject(s)
Coated Materials, Biocompatible/chemistry , Nanotubes, Peptide/chemistry , Electronics/methods , Light , Luminescence , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning/methods , Spectrum Analysis/methods
12.
J Mater Sci Mater Med ; 22(7): 1741-52, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21611792

ABSTRACT

The effect of different mechanical and chemical pre-treatments on the adhesion strength of hydroxyapatite (HAp) coating on a commercially pure titanium (CP-Ti) substrate was studied by means of a standard tensile test followed by microscopic and chemical analysis to determine the locus of fracture. In addition, the effects of either these pre-treatments or post-treatment by low-energy electron irradiation, which allowed tuning the wettability of the surface, on both osteoblast progenitor attachment and S. aureus bacteria attachment were investigated. A dedicated program was developed for unambiguous identification and count of stained cells. A single-phase HAp coating was formed by electrodeposition. A series of surface pre-treatments consisted of grinding down to P1000, etching in HNO3/HF solution, grit blast, soaking in NaOH and subsequent heat treatment provided the highest adhesion strength to the HAp coating. Osteoblast progenitors derived from rats may be attached preferentially to a hydrophilic surface (post-treatment to θ = 30°), while the bacteria seemed to be less attached to hydrophobic surfaces (post-treatment to θ = 105°). However, the results were not statistically different. The bacteria seemed to be less attached to the smoother, uncoated surfaces.


Subject(s)
Hydroxyapatites/chemistry , Hydroxyapatites/pharmacology , Osteoblasts/physiology , Staphylococcus aureus/physiology , Titanium/chemistry , Animals , Bacterial Adhesion , Biocompatible Materials , Cell Adhesion/physiology , Electrochemical Techniques , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Rats , Surface Properties
13.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 17609, 2021 09 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34475484

ABSTRACT

Bioinspired fluorescence, being widely explored for imaging purposes, faces challenges in delivering bright biocompatible sources. While quite a few techniques have been developed to reach this goal, encapsulation of high-quantum yield fluorescent dyes in natural biological forms suggest achieving superior light-emitting characteristics, approaching amplified spontaneous emission and even lasing. Here we compare gain capabilities of highly concentrated Rhodamine B solutions with a newly synthesized biocompatible peptide derivative hybrid polymer/peptide material, RhoB-PEG1300-F6, which contains the fluorescent covalently bound dye. While concentration quenching effects limit the maximal achievable gain of dissolved Rhodamine B, biocompatible conjugation allows elevating amplification coefficients towards moderately high values. In particular, Rhodamine B, anchored to the peptide derivative material, demonstrates gain of 22-23 cm-1 for a 10-2 M solution, while a pure dye solution possesses 25% smaller values at the same concentration. New biocompatible fluorescent agents pave ways to demonstrate lasing in living organisms and can be further introduced to therapeutic applications, if proper solvents are found.

14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 132(44): 15632-6, 2010 Nov 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20958029

ABSTRACT

In the world of biology, "self-assembly" is the ability of biological entities to interact with one another to form supramolecular structures. One basic group of self-assembled structures is peptide nanotubes (PNTs). However, the self-assembly mechanism, with its special characteristics, is not yet fully understood. An exceptional quantum-confined approach is shown here for the self-assembly mechanism in bio-inspired materials. We found the elementary building block of the studied PNT, which is self-assembled from short peptides composed of two phenylalanine residues, to be 0D-quantum-confined (can be related to confinement in 3D), also called a quantum dot (QD). This elementary building block can further self-assemble to a PNT formation. It has been observed that the assembly process of dots to tubes and the disassembly process of tubes to dots are reversible. We further show that a similar dipeptide can also self-assemble to a QD-like structure, with different dimensions. The presented peptide QD structures are nanometer-sized structures, with pronounced exciton effects, which may promote the use of an entirely new kind of organic QDs.


Subject(s)
Nanotubes, Peptide/chemistry , Phenylalanine/chemistry , Quantum Dots
15.
Nano Lett ; 9(9): 3111-5, 2009 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19736968

ABSTRACT

We report on observation of photoluminescence (PL) in blue and UV regions of exciton origin in bioinspired material-peptide nanotubes (PNTs). Steplike optical absorption and PL measurements have allowed finding quantum confined (QC) phenomenon in PNTs. The estimations show that QC in these nanotubes occurs due to a crystalline structure of subnanometer scale dimension formed under the self-assembly process. Our new findings pave the way for the integration of PNT in a new generation of optical devices. A blue PL array of a PNT-patterned device is demonstrated.


Subject(s)
Luminescence , Nanotubes/chemistry , Peptides/chemistry , Quantum Theory , Materials Testing , Nanotechnology , Nanotubes/ultrastructure , Particle Size , Surface Properties
16.
Adv Mater ; 30(5)2018 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29226468

ABSTRACT

Bio-nanophotonics is a wide field in which advanced optical materials, biomedicine, fundamental optics, and nanotechnology are combined and result in the development of biomedical optical chips. Silk fibers or synthetic bioabsorbable polymers are the main light-guiding components. In this work, an advanced concept of integrated bio-optics is proposed, which is based on bioinspired peptide optical materials exhibiting wide optical transparency, nonlinear and electrooptical properties, and effective passive and active waveguiding. Developed new technology combining bottom-up controlled deposition of peptide planar wafers of a large area and top-down focus ion beam lithography provides direct fabrication of peptide optical integrated circuits. Finding a deep modification of peptide optical properties by reconformation of biological secondary structure from native phase to ß-sheet architecture is followed by the appearance of visible fluorescence and unexpected transition from a native passive optical waveguiding to an active one. Original biocompatibility, switchable regimes of waveguiding, and multifunctional nonlinear optical properties make these new peptide planar optical materials attractive for application in emerging technology of lab-on-biochips, combining biomedical photonic and electronic circuits toward medical diagnosis, light-activated therapy, and health monitoring.


Subject(s)
Peptides/chemistry , Nanotechnology , Optics and Photonics , Photons , Protein Structure, Secondary
17.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 4(9): 1700052, 2017 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28932664

ABSTRACT

Short peptides made from repeating units of phenylalanine self-assemble into a remarkable variety of micro- and nanostructures including tubes, tapes, spheres, and fibrils. These bio-organic structures are found to possess striking mechanical, electrical, and optical properties, which are rarely seen in organic materials, and are therefore shown useful for diverse applications including regenerative medicine, targeted drug delivery, and biocompatible fluorescent probes. Consequently, finding new optical properties in these materials can significantly advance their practical use, for example, by allowing new ways to visualize, manipulate, and utilize them in new, in vivo, sensing applications. Here, by leveraging a unique electro-optic phase microscopy technique, combined with traditional structural analysis, it is measured in di- and triphenylalanine peptide structures a surprisingly large electro-optic response of the same order as the best performing inorganic crystals. In addition, spontaneous domain formation is observed in triphenylalanine tapes, and the origin of their electro-optic activity is unveiled to be related to a porous triclinic structure, with extensive antiparallel beta-sheet arrangement. The strong electro-optic response of these porous peptide structures with the capability of hosting guest molecules opens the door to create new biocompatible, environmental friendly functional materials for electro-optic applications, including biomedical imaging, sensing, and optical manipulation.

18.
Opt Express ; 14(20): 9371-6, 2006 Oct 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19529321

ABSTRACT

We present a new type of two-dimensional nonlinear structure for quasi-phase matching. This structure has continuous rotational symmetry, and in contrary to the commonly used periodic structures, is not lattice shaped and has no translation symmetry. It is shown that this annular symmetry structure possesses interesting phase matching attributes that are significantly different than those of periodic structures. In particular, it enables simultaneous phase-matched frequency doubling of the same pump into several different directions. Moreover, it has extremely wide phase-mismatch tolerance, since a change in the phase matching conditions does not change the second harmonic power, but only changes its propagation direction. Several structures were fabricated using either the indirect e-beam method in LiNbO(3) or the electric field poling method in stoichiometric LiTaO(3), and their conversion efficiencies, as well as angular and thermal dependencies, were characterized by second harmonic generation.

19.
Acta Biomater ; 30: 72-77, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26546415

ABSTRACT

Unique linear and nonlinear optical properties of bioinspired peptide nanostructures such as wideband transparency and high second-order nonlinear optical response, combined with elongated tubular shape of variable size and rapid self-assembly fabrication process, make them promising for diverse bio-nano-photonic applications. This new generation of nanomaterials of biological origin possess physical properties similar to those of biological structures. Here, we focus on new specific functionality of ultrashort peptide nanotubes to guide light at fundamental and second-harmonic generation (SHG) frequency in horizontal and vertical peptide nanotubes configurations. Conducted simulations and experimental data show that these self-assembled linear and nonlinear optical bio-waveguides provide strong optical power confinement factor, demonstrate pronounced directionality of SHG and high conversion efficiency of SHG ∼10(-5). Our study gives new insight on physics of light propagation in nanostructures of biological origin and opens the avenue towards new and unexpected applications of these waveguiding effects in bio-nanomaterials both for biomedical nonlinear microscopy imaging recognition and development of novel integrated nanophotonic devices.


Subject(s)
Light , Nanotubes/chemistry , Nanotubes/ultrastructure , Peptides/chemistry
20.
ACS Nano ; 4(2): 610-4, 2010 Feb 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20131852

ABSTRACT

We show anomalously strong shear piezoelectric activity in self-assembled diphenylalanine peptide nanotubes (PNTs), indicating electric polarization directed along the tube axis. Comparison with well-known piezoelectric LiNbO(3) and lateral signal calibration yields sufficiently high effective piezoelectric coefficient values of at least 60 pm/V (shear response for tubes of approximately 200 nm in diameter). PNTs demonstrate linear deformation without irreversible degradation in a broad range of driving voltages. The results open up a wide avenue for developing new generations of "green" piezoelectric materials and piezonanodevices based on bioactive tubular nanostructures potentially compatible with human tissue.


Subject(s)
Biomimetic Materials/chemistry , Electricity , Nanotubes/chemistry , Phenylalanine/analogs & derivatives , Stress, Mechanical , Dipeptides , Phenylalanine/chemistry , Rotation
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