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1.
Adv Mater ; : e2402287, 2024 May 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38696529

ABSTRACT

Biological olfaction relies on a large number of receptors that function as sensors to detect gaseous molecules. It is challenging to realize artificial olfactory systems that contain similarly large numbers of sensory materials. It is shown that combinatorial materials processing with vapor deposition can be used to fabricate large arrays of distinct chemiresistive sensing materials. By combining these with light-emitting diodes, an array of chemiresistively-modulated light-emitting diodes, or ChemLEDs, that permit a simultaneous optical read-out in response to an analyte is obtained. The optical nose uses a common voltage source and ground for all sensing elements and thus eliminates the need for complex wiring of individual sensors. This optical nose contains one hundred ChemLEDs and generates unique light patterns in response to gases and their mixtures. Optical pattern recognition methods enable the quantitative prediction of the corresponding concentrations and compositions, thereby paving the way for massively parallel artificial olfactory systems. ChemLEDs open the possibility to explore demanding gas sensing applications, including in environmental, food quality monitoring, and potentially diagnostic settings.

2.
ACS Nano ; 17(24): 25496-25506, 2023 Dec 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37992234

ABSTRACT

Chiral plasmonic nanostructures possess a chiroptical response orders of magnitude stronger than that of natural biomolecular systems, making them highly promising for a wide range of biochemical, medical, and physical applications. Despite extensive efforts to artificially create and tune the chiroptical properties of chiral nanostructures through compositional and geometrical modifications, a fundamental understanding of their underlying mechanisms remains limited. In this study, we present a comprehensive investigation of individual gold nanohelices by using advanced analytical electron microscopy techniques. Our results, as determined by angle-resolved cathodoluminescence polarimetry measurements, reveal a strong correlation between the circular polarization state of the emitted far-field radiation and the handedness of the chiral nanostructure in terms of both its dominant circularity and directional intensity distribution. Further analyses, including electron energy-loss measurements and numerical simulations, demonstrate that this correlation is driven by longitudinal plasmonic modes that oscillate along the helical windings, much like straight nanorods of equal strength and length. However, due to the three-dimensional shape of the structures, these longitudinal modes induce dipolar transverse modes with charge oscillations along the short axis of the helices for certain resonance energies. Their radiative decay leads to observed emission in the visible range. Our findings provide insight into the radiative properties and underlying mechanisms of chiral plasmonic nanostructures and enable their future development and application in a wide range of fields, such as nano-optics, metamaterials, molecular physics, biochemistry, and, most promising, chiral sensing via plasmonically enhanced chiral optical spectroscopy techniques.

3.
Chemphyschem ; 24(22): e202300294, 2023 11 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37640688

ABSTRACT

The DNA origami technique allows fast and large-scale production of DNA nanostructures that stand out with an accurate addressability of their anchor points. This enables the precise organization of guest molecules on the surfaces and results in diverse functionalities. However, the compatibility of DNA origami structures with catalytically active matter, a promising pathway to realize autonomous DNA machines, has so far been tested only in the context of bio-enzymatic activity, but not in chemically harsh reaction conditions. The latter are often required for catalytic processes involving high-energy fuels. Here, we provide proof-of-concept data showing that DNA origami structures are stable in 5 % hydrogen peroxide solutions over the course of at least three days. We report a protocol to couple these to platinum nanoparticles and show catalytic activity of the hybrid structures. We suggest that the presented hybrid structures are suitable to realize catalytic nanomachines combined with precisely engineered DNA nanostructures.


Subject(s)
Metal Nanoparticles , Nanostructures , Hydrogen Peroxide , Platinum , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , Nanostructures/chemistry , Nanotechnology/methods , Nucleic Acid Conformation
4.
J Chem Phys ; 159(4)2023 Jul 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37503846

ABSTRACT

We investigate the electron emission from 3D chiral silver alloy nanohelices initiated by femtosecond laser pulses with a central photon energy of hν = 1.65 eV, well below the work function of the material. We find hot but thermally distributed electron spectra and a strong anisotropy in the electron yield with left- and right-circularly polarized light excitations, which invert in sign between left- and right-handed helices. We analyze the kinetic energy distribution and discuss the role of effective temperatures. Measurements of the reflectance and simulations of the absorbance of the helices based on retarded field calculations are compared to the anisotropy in photoemission. We find a significant enhancement of the anisotropy in the electron emission in comparison to the optical absorption. Neither simple thermionic nor a multiphoton photoemission can explain the experimentally observed asymmetries. Single photon deep-UV photoemission from these helices together with a change of the work function suggests a contribution of the chirally induced spin selectivity effect to the observed asymmetries.

5.
Adv Mater ; 35(48): e2305296, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37515825

ABSTRACT

The benefits of ultrasound are its ease-of-use and its ability to precisely deliver energy in opaque and complex media. However, most materials responsive to ultrasound show a weak response, requiring the use of high powers, which are associated with undesirable streaming, cavitation, or temperature rise. These effects hinder response control and may even cause damage to the medium where the ultrasound is applied. Moreover, materials that are currently in use rely on all-or-nothing effects, limiting the ability to fine-tune the response of the material on the fly. For these reasons, there is a need for materials that can respond to low intensity ultrasound with programmable responses. Here it is demonstrated that antibubbles are a low-intensity-ultrasound-responsive material system that can controllably release a payload using acoustic pressures in the kilopascal range. Varying their size and composition tunes the release pressure, and the response can be switched between a single release and stepwise release across multiple ultrasound pulses. Observations using confocal and high-speed microscopy reveal different ways that can lead to release. These findings lay the groundwork to design antibubbles that controllably respond to low-intensity ultrasound, opening a wide range of applications ranging from ultrasound-responsive material systems to carriers for targeted delivery.

6.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 18(10): 1213-1221, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37500771

ABSTRACT

Owing to Brownian-motion effects, the precise manipulation of individual micro- and nanoparticles in solution is challenging. Therefore, scanning-probe-based techniques, such as atomic force microscopy, attach particles to cantilevers to enable their use as nanoprobes. Here we demonstrate a versatile electrokinetic trap that simultaneously controls the two-dimensional position with a precision of 20 nm and 0.5° in the three-dimensional orientation of an untethered nanowire, as small as 300 nm in length, under an optical microscope. The method permits the active transport of nanowires with a speed-dependent accuracy reaching 90 nm at 2.7 µm s-1. It also allows for their synchronous three-dimensional alignment and rotation during translocation along complex trajectories. We use the electrokinetic trap to accurately move a nanoprobe and stably position it on the surface of a single bacterial cell for sensing secreted metabolites for extended periods. The precision-controlled manipulation underpins developing nanorobotic tools for assembly, micromanipulation and biological measurements with subcellular resolution.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques , Nanoparticles , Nanowires , Motion , Microscopy, Atomic Force
7.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37028299

ABSTRACT

Acoustic holograms are able to control pressure fields with high spatial resolution, enabling complex fields to be projected with minimal hardware. This capability has made holograms attractive tools for applications, including manipulation, fabrication, cellular assembly, and ultrasound therapy. However, the performance benefits of acoustic holograms have traditionally come at the cost of temporal control. Once a hologram is fabricated, the field it produces is static and cannot be reconfigured. Here, we introduce a technique to project time-dynamic pressure fields by combining an input transducer array with a multiplane hologram, which is represented computationally as a diffractive acoustic network (DAN). By exciting different input elements in the array, we can project distinct and spatially complex amplitude fields to an output plane. We numerically show that the multiplane DAN outperforms a single-plane hologram, while using fewer total pixels. More generally, we show that adding more planes can increase the output quality of the DAN for a fixed number of degrees of freedom (DoFs; pixels). Finally, we leverage the pixel efficiency of the DAN to introduce a combinatorial projector that can project more output fields than there are transducer inputs. We experimentally demonstrate that a multiplane DAN could be used to realize such a projector.

8.
Sci Adv ; 9(8): eadd9186, 2023 02 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36812320

ABSTRACT

The ability to physically manipulate specific cells is critical for the fields of biomedicine, synthetic biology, and living materials. Ultrasound has the ability to manipulate cells with high spatiotemporal precision via acoustic radiation force (ARF). However, because most cells have similar acoustic properties, this capability is disconnected from cellular genetic programs. Here, we show that gas vesicles (GVs)-a unique class of gas-filled protein nanostructures-can serve as genetically encodable actuators for selective acoustic manipulation. Because of their lower density and higher compressibility relative to water, GVs experience strong ARF with opposite polarity to most other materials. When expressed inside cells, GVs invert the cells' acoustic contrast and amplify the magnitude of their ARF, allowing the cells to be selectively manipulated with sound waves based on their genotype. GVs provide a direct link between gene expression and acoustomechanical actuation, opening a paradigm for selective cellular control in a broad range of contexts.


Subject(s)
Acoustics , Proteins , Sound , Ultrasonography , Mechanical Phenomena
9.
Sci Adv ; 9(6): eadf6182, 2023 02 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36753553

ABSTRACT

Acoustic waves exert forces when they interact with matter. Shaping ultrasound fields precisely in 3D thus allows control over the force landscape and should permit particulates to fall into place to potentially form whole 3D objects in "one shot." This is promising for rapid prototyping, most notably biofabrication, since conventional methods are typically slow and apply mechanical or chemical stress on biological cells. Here, we realize the generation of compact holographic ultrasound fields and demonstrate the one-step assembly of matter using acoustic forces. We combine multiple holographic fields that drive the contactless assembly of solid microparticles, hydrogel beads, and biological cells inside standard labware. The structures can be fixed via gelation of the surrounding medium. In contrast to previous work, this approach handles matter with positive acoustic contrast and does not require opposing waves, supporting surfaces or scaffolds. We envision promising applications of 3D holographic ultrasound fields in tissue engineering and additive manufacturing.


Subject(s)
Holography , Sound , Tissue Engineering , Acoustics , Hydrogels/chemistry
10.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(4): 5620-5627, 2023 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36690332

ABSTRACT

Nanoporous metals possess unique properties attributed to their high surface area and interconnected nanoscale ligaments. They are mostly fabricated by wet synthetic methods that are not universal to various metals and not free from impurities due to solution-based etching processes. Here, we demonstrate that the plasma treatment of metal nanoparticles formed by physical vapor deposition is a general route to form such films with many metals including the non-noble ones. The resultant nanoporous metallic films are free of impurities and possess highly curved ligaments and nanopores. The metal films are ultrathin, yet remarkably robust and very well connected, and thus are highly promising for various applications such as transparent conducting electrodes.

11.
Adv Mater ; 35(34): e2209282, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36631958

ABSTRACT

Against the background of the current healthcare and climate emergencies, surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) is becoming a highly topical technique for identifying and fingerprinting molecules, e.g., within viruses, bacteria, drugs, and atmospheric aerosols. Crucial for SERS is the need for substrates with strong and reproducible enhancements of the Raman signal over large areas and with a low fabrication cost. Here, dense arrays of plasmonic nanohelices (≈100 nm in length), which are of interest for many advanced nanophotonics applications, are investigated, and they are shown to present excellent SERS properties. As an illustration, two new ways to probe near-field enhancement generated with circular polarization at chiral metasurfaces are presented, first using the Raman spectra of achiral molecules (crystal violet) and second using a single, element-specific, achiral molecular vibrational mode (i.e., a single Raman peak). The nanohelices can be fabricated over large areas at a low cost and they provide strong, robust and uniform Raman enhancement. It is anticipated that these advanced materials will find broad applications in surface enhanced Raman spectroscopies and material science.

12.
Adv Mater ; 35(34): e2107917, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35332960

ABSTRACT

Physical shadow growth is a vacuum deposition technique that permits a wide variety of 3D-shaped nanoparticles and structures to be fabricated from a large library of materials. Recent advances in the control of the shadow effect at the nanoscale expand the scope of nanomaterials from spherical nanoparticles to complex 3D shaped hybrid nanoparticles and structures. In particular, plasmonically active nanomaterials can be engineered in their shape and material composition so that they exhibit unique physical and chemical properties. Here, the recent progress in the development of shadow growth techniques to realize hybrid plasmonic nanomaterials is discussed. The review describes how fabrication permits the material response to be engineered and highlights novel functions. Potential fields of application with a focus on photonic devices, biomedical, and chiral spectroscopic applications are discussed.

13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(30): 13436-13440, 2022 08 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35919987

ABSTRACT

In their Comment (DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c02965) on two related publications by our groups (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2021, 143, 20884-20890; DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c09455) and another (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2022, 144, 1380-1388; DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c11754), Huang and Granick discuss the diffusion NMR measurements of molecules during a copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) "click" reaction. Here we respond to these comments and maintain that no diffusion enhancement was observed for any species during the reaction. We show that the relaxation agent does not interfere with the CuAAC reaction kinetics nor the diffusion of the molecules involved. Similarly, the gradient pulse length and diffusion time do not affect the diffusion coefficients. Peak overlap was completely removed in our study with the use of hydrazine as the reducing agent. The steady-state assumption does not hold for these diffusion measurements that take several minutes, which is the reason monotonic gradient orders are not suitable. Finally, we discuss the other reactions where similar changes in diffusion have been claimed. Our conclusions are fully supported by the results represented in our original JACS Article and the corresponding Supporting Information.


Subject(s)
Alkynes , Azides , Alkynes/chemistry , Azides/chemistry , Catalysis , Copper/chemistry , Cycloaddition Reaction
14.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(25): 254502, 2022 Jun 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35802439

ABSTRACT

Manipulation of macroscale objects by sound is fundamentally limited by the wavelength and object size. Resonant subwavelength scatterers such as bubbles can decouple these requirements, but typically the forces are weak. Here we show that patterning bubbles into arrays leads to geometric amplification of the scattering forces, enabling the precise assembly and manipulation of cm-scale objects. We rotate a 1 cm object continuously or position it with 15 µm accuracy, using sound with a 50 cm wavelength. The results are described well by a theoretical model. Our results lay the foundation for using secondary Bjerknes forces in the controlled organization and manipulation of macroscale structures.


Subject(s)
Acoustics , Microbubbles , Models, Theoretical , Sound
15.
J Chem Phys ; 156(24): 245103, 2022 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35778069

ABSTRACT

We report on the diffusion mechanism of short, single-stranded DNA molecules with up to 100 nucleobases in agarose gels with concentrations of up to 2.0% with the aim to characterize the DNA-agarose interaction. The diffusion coefficients were measured directly, i.e., without any model assumptions, by pulsed field gradient nuclear magnetic resonance (PFG-NMR). We find that the diffusion coefficient decreases, as expected, with an increase in both DNA strand length and gel concentration. In addition, we performed Monte Carlo simulations of particle diffusion in a model network of polymer chains, considering our experimental conditions. Together, the Monte Carlo simulations and the PFG-NMR results show that the decrease in diffusion coefficients in the presence of the agarose gel is due to a temporary adhesion of the DNA molecules to the surface of gel fibers. The average adhesion time to a given gel fiber increases with the length of the DNA strands but is independent of the number of gel fibers. The corresponding magnitude of the binding enthalpies of DNA strands to gel fibers indicates that a mixture of van der Waals interactions and hydrogen bonding contributes to the decreased diffusion of DNA in agarose gels.


Subject(s)
DNA , DNA/chemistry , Gels/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Monte Carlo Method , Sepharose/chemistry
16.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 9(9): e2104401, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35072361

ABSTRACT

Dynamic acoustic wavefront control is essential for many acoustic applications, including biomedical imaging and particle manipulation. Conventional methods are either static or in the case of phased transducer arrays are limited to a few elements and hence limited control. Here, a dynamic acoustic wavefront control method based on light patterns that locally trigger the generation of microbubbles is introduced. As a small gas bubble can effectively stop ultrasound transmission in a liquid, the optical images are used to drive a short electrolysis and form microbubble patterns. The generation of microbubbles is controlled by structured light projection at a low intensity of 65 mW cm-2 and only requires about 100 ms. The bubble pattern is thus able to modify the wavefront of acoustic waves from a single transducer. The method is employed to realize an acoustic projector that can generate various acoustic images and patterns, including multiple foci and acoustic phase gradients. Hydrophone scans show that the acoustic field after the modulation by the microbubble pattern forms according to the prediction. It is believed that combining a versatile optical projector to realize an ultrasound projector is a general scheme, which can benefit a multitude of applications based on dynamic acoustic fields.

17.
Chem Rev ; 122(5): 5165-5208, 2022 03 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34767350

ABSTRACT

Smart materials can respond to stimuli and adapt their responses based on external cues from their environments. Such behavior requires a way to transport energy efficiently and then convert it for use in applications such as actuation, sensing, or signaling. Ultrasound can carry energy safely and with low losses through complex and opaque media. It can be localized to small regions of space and couple to systems over a wide range of time scales. However, the same characteristics that allow ultrasound to propagate efficiently through materials make it difficult to convert acoustic energy into other useful forms. Recent work across diverse fields has begun to address this challenge, demonstrating ultrasonic effects that provide control over physical and chemical systems with surprisingly high specificity. Here, we review recent progress in ultrasound-matter interactions, focusing on effects that can be incorporated as components in smart materials. These techniques build on fundamental phenomena such as cavitation, microstreaming, scattering, and acoustic radiation forces to enable capabilities such as actuation, sensing, payload delivery, and the initiation of chemical or biological processes. The diversity of emerging techniques holds great promise for a wide range of smart capabilities supported by ultrasound and poses interesting questions for further investigations.


Subject(s)
Smart Materials
18.
Sci Robot ; 6(61): eabn2720, 2021 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34910531

ABSTRACT

Looking back at the last 5 years of Science Robotics and looking forward to the next 5.

19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(49): 20884-20890, 2021 12 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34856103

ABSTRACT

The reported changes in self-diffusion of small molecules during reactions have been attributed to "boosted mobility". We demonstrate the critical role of changing concentrations of paramagnetic ions on nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) signal intensities, which led to erroneous measurements of diffusion coefficients. We present simple methods to overcome this problem. The use of shuffled gradient amplitudes allows accurate diffusion NMR measurements, even with time-dependent relaxation rates caused by changing concentrations of paramagnetic ions. The addition of a paramagnetic relaxation agent allows accurate determination of both diffusion coefficients and reaction kinetics during a single experiment. We analyze a copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition "click" reaction, for which boosted mobility has been claimed. With our methods, we accurately measure the diffusive behavior of the solvent, starting materials, and product and find no global increase in diffusion coefficients during the reaction. We overcome NMR signal overlap using an alternative reducing agent to improve the accuracy of the diffusion measurements. The alkyne reactant diffuses slower as the reaction proceeds due to binding to the copper catalyst during the catalytic cycle. The formation of this intermediate was confirmed by complementary NMR techniques and density functional theory calculations. Our work calls into question recent claims that molecules actively propel or swim during reactions and establishes that time-resolved diffusion NMR measurements can provide valuable insight into reaction mechanisms.

20.
Urology ; 156: e103-e110, 2021 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34087314

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate "panoramic image stitching" for cystoscopy, a novel technique to augment a urologist's field of view transoperatively in real-time during a cystoscopic "keyhole" procedure, 3-D bladder phantoms provide a suitable setting. Thus, the objective is the evaluation of different 3-D printed bladder phantoms with respect to their ability to be used for extended experiments of panoramic cystoscopy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Five bladder phantoms with different geometries, surface textures, stiffness and materials were assessed with rigid 0- and 30-degree lenses and a video-cystoscope regarding suitability for image stitching. For panoramic image generation, we use an established real-time stitching approach successfully applied to retrospective cystoscopy image sequences from real clinical cases. For evaluation of the experiments two quality criteria were defined, namely 'completeness' (describing the internal area of the phantom that can be stitched), and 'extension' (how far does an acquired panorama extend beyond the assumed 'equator' of the phantom). RESULTS: Panoramas of all phantom and endoscope combinations were computed. Using landmarks (south pole, north pole, equator) in the phantoms, maximum extension of the panoramas was assessed. The computed panoramas yield maximum extensions between 270o (0-degree cystoscope) and 330o (video cystoscope). Deformable phantoms yield larger panoramas than the rigid models. CONCLUSION: In can be concluded that the stitching process works quite well with all evaluated phantoms. Nevertheless, a novel phantom would be needed, combing a deformable, elliptical geometry and real-type vascular texture in the inside, that can be filled with water.


Subject(s)
Cystoscopy , Phantoms, Imaging , Printing, Three-Dimensional , Urinary Bladder/anatomy & histology , Humans
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