-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: In this work, parametric noise squeezing and parametric resonance are realized through the use of an electronic feedback circuit to excite a microcantilever with a signal proportional to the product of the microcantilever's displacement and a harmonic signal. The cantilever's displacement is monitored using an optical lever technique. By adjusting the gain of an amplifier in the feedback circuit, regimes of parametric noise squeezing/amplification and the principal and secondary parametric resonances of fundamental and higher order eigenmodes can be easily accessed. The exceptionally symmetric amplitude response of the microcantilever in the narrow frequency bandwidth is traced to a nonlinear parametric excitation term that arises due to the cubic nonlinearity in the output of the position-sensitive photodiode. The feedback circuit, working in both the regimes of parametric resonance and noise squeezing, allows an enhancement of the microcantilever's effective quality-factor (Q-factor) by two orders of magnitude under ambient conditions, extending the mass sensing capabilities of a conventional microcantilever into the sub-picogram regime. Likewise, experiments designed to parametrically oscillate a microcantilever in water using electronic feedback also show an increase in the microcantilever's effective Q-factor by two orders of magnitude, opening the field to high-sensitivity mass sensing in liquid environments.
The Review of scientific instruments 06/2012; 83(6):065109. · 1.52 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Pathogenic bacteria obtain the iron necessary for survival by releasing an iron chelator, termed a siderophore, and retrieving the iron-siderophore complex via a cell surface siderophore receptor. We have exploited the high affinity of Yersinia enterocolitica for its siderophore, deferoxamine, to develop a rapid method for capture and identification of Yersinia. In this methodology, a deferoxamine-bovine serum albumin conjugate is printed onto a gold-plated chip in a parallel line pattern. After flowing a suspension of Yersinia across the siderophore-derivatized chip, any Yersinia that binds to the chip is detected by dark-field microscopy analysis of the scattered light, followed by Fourier transform analysis of the scattering pattern. Since peak intensities are found to correlate with pathogen concentration, pathogen titers as low as 10(3) cfu/ml can be readily detected. Moreover, immobilized deferoxamine can distinguish Y. enterocolitica, which binds ferrioxamine (deferoxamine-Fe), from Staphylococcus aureus, Mycobacterium smegmatis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which don't. Because human pathogens cannot easily mutate their iron retrieval systems without loss of viability, we suggest that few if any mutant Yersinia will emerge that can avoid detection. Together with previous results demonstrating selective capture of Pseudomonas aeruginosa by its immobilized siderophore (pyoverdin), these data suggest that pathogen-specific siderophores may constitute effective and immutable capture ligands for rapid detection and identification of their cognate pathogens.
Lab on a Chip 02/2012; 12(5):971-6. · 5.67 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Electrochemical oxidation and etching of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) has been achieved using biased atomic force microscopy (AFM) lithography, allowing patterns of varying complexity to be written into the top layers of HOPG. The graphitic oxidation process and the trench geometry after writing were monitored using intermittent contact mode AFM. Electrostatic force microscopy reveals that the isolated mesoscopic islands formed during the AFM lithography process become positively charged, suggesting that they are laterally isolated from the surrounding HOPG substrate. The electrical transport studies of these laterally isolated finite-layer graphitic islands enable detailed characterization of electrical conduction along the c-direction and reveal an unexpected stability of the charged state. Utilizing conducting-atomic force microscopy, the measured I(V) characteristics revealed significant non-linearities. Micro-Raman studies confirm the presence of oxy functional groups formed during the lithography process.
Nanotechnology 06/2011; 22(24):245302. · 3.98 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Rapid identification of infectious pathogens constitutes an important step toward limiting the spread of contagious diseases. Whereas antibody-based detection strategies are often selected because of their speed, mutation of the pathogen can render such tests obsolete. In an effort to develop a rapid yet mutation-proof method for pathogen identification, we have explored the use of "immutable ligands" to capture the desired microbe on a detection device. In this "proof-of-principle" study, we immobilize pyoverdine, a siderophore that Pseudomonas aeruginosa must bind to obtain iron, onto gold-plated glass chips and then examine the siderophore's ability to capture P. aeruginosa for its subsequent identification. We demonstrate that exposure of pyoverdine-coated chips to increasing dilutions of P. aeruginosa allows detection of the bacterium down to concentrations as low as 10(2)/mL. We further demonstrate that printing of the siderophore in a periodic pattern on the detection chip enables a sensitive method of detecting the bound pathogen by a Fourier transform analysis of light scattered by the patterned chip. Because unrelated bacteria are not captured on the pyoverdine chip, we conclude that pyoverdine can be exploited for the specific binding and identification of P. aeruginosa. It follows that the utilization of other microbe-specific "immutable ligands" may allow the specific identification of their cognate pathogens.
Langmuir 10/2010; 26(19):15424-9. · 4.19 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: We investigate the mechanical properties of cantilevered silver-gallium (Ag(2)Ga) nanowires using laser Doppler vibrometry. From measurements of the resonant frequencies and associated operating deflection shapes, we demonstrate that these Ag(2)Ga nanowires behave as ideal Euler-Bernoulli beams. Furthermore, radial asymmetries in these nanowires are detected through high resolution measurements of the vibration spectra. These crystalline nanowires possess many ideal characteristics for nanoscale force and mass sensing, including small spring constants (as low as 10(-4) N m(-1)), high frequency bandwidth with resonance frequencies in the 0.02-10 MHz range, small suspended mass (picograms), and relatively high Q-factors (approximately 2-50) under ambient conditions. We evaluate the utility of Ag(2)Ga nanowires for nanocantilever applications, including ultrasmall mass and high frequency bandwidth piconewton force detection.
Nanotechnology 07/2010; 21(30):305701. · 3.98 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The time response of tuning-fork based sensors can be improved by operating them at higher eigenmodes because a measurement takes at least one oscillation cycle in dynamic force microscopy and the oscillation period of the second eigenmode is only about one sixth of the fundamental mode. Here we study the higher-order eigenmodes of quartz qPlus sensors [Bettac etal, Nanotechnology 20, 264009 (2009); Giessibl and Reichling, Nanotechnology 16, S118 (2005); Giessibl, Appl. Phys. Lett. 76, 1470 (2000); and Giessibl, Appl. Phys. Lett. 73, 3956 (1998)], their equivalent stiffness, and piezoelectric sensitivity, while paying special attention to the influence of the mass and rotary inertia of the sensing tip which is attached to the end of the qPlus quartz cantilever. A combination of theoretical modeling and scanning laser Doppler vibrometry is used to study the eigenmodes of qPlus sensors with tungsten tips. We find that the geometry of tungsten tips can greatly influence the shape, equivalent stiffness, and piezoelectric sensitivity of the second eigenmode of the quartz cantilever. At a critical tip length it is possible to theoretically achieve infinite equivalent stiffness and infinite piezoelectric sensitivity when the tip becomes a perfect node of vibration and beyond this critical tip length the second eigenmode loses its vibration node and the trajectory of the tip reverses with respect to the beam curvature. The findings have major implications for optimizing tip geometry for high-resolution imaging with qPlus sensors using higher eigenmodes.
Journal of Applied Physics 06/2010; · 2.17 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Laser Doppler vibrometry is used to measure the thermal vibration spectra of individual multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWNTs) under ambient conditions. Since the entire vibration spectrum is measured with high frequency resolution, the resonant frequencies and quality factors of the MWNTs are accurately determined, allowing for estimates of their elastic moduli. Because the diameters of the MWNTs studied are smaller than the wavelength of the vibrometer's laser, Mie scattering is used to estimate values for the smallest diameter nanotube or nanowire whose vibration can be measured in this way.
Nanotechnology 02/2009; 20(3):035702. · 3.98 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A technique of measuring contact resistance between an individual nanotube and a deposited metallic film is described. Using laser ablation to sequentially shorten the contact length between a nanotube and the evaporated metallic film, the linear resistivity of the nanotube as well as the specific contact resistivity between the nanotube and metallic film can be determined. This technique can be generally used to measure the specific contact resistance that develops between a metallic film and a variety of different nanowires and nanotubes.
Nanotechnology 03/2008; 19(12):125703. · 3.98 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Molecular layers formed from 4-trifluoromethylbenzenediazonium tetrafluoroborate and 4-Methylbenzenediazonium tetrafluoroborate have been assembled on H-passivated Si(111) and studied by UHV STM and XPS. STM imaging shows well-developed Si(111) step edges and terraces both on Si(111):H and Si(111) substrates covered with a molecular layer. STM I(V) data acquired at different tip-substrate separations reveals a factor of approximately 10 enhancement in current for positive bias voltage when current flows through the 4-trifluoromethyl molecule when compared to the 4-methyl variant. The observed current enhancement in I(V) can be understood by comparing the projected density of states of the two molecule-Si systems calculated using a density functional theory local density approximation after geometry optimization was performed via the conjugate gradient method. XPS data independently confirm that H-passivated Si(111) remains oxygen free for short exposures to ambient conditions and provide evidence that the molecules chemically react with the silicon surface.
Langmuir 04/2007; 23(9):4700-8. · 4.19 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: We move beyond antibody-antigen binding systems and demonstrate that short peptide ligands can be used to efficiently capture Bacillus subtilis (a simulant of Bacillus anthracis) spores in liquids. On an eight-cantilever array chip, four cantilevers were coated with binding peptide (NHFLPKV-GGGC) and the other four were coated with control peptide (LFNKHVP-GGGC) for reagentless detection of whole B. subtilis spores in liquids. The peptide-ligand-functionalized microcantilever chip was mounted onto a fluid cell filled with a B. subtilis spore suspension for approximately 40 min; a 40 nm net differential deflection was observed. Fifth-mode resonant frequency measurements were also performed before and after dipping microcantilever arrays into a static B. subtilis solution showing a substantial decrease in frequency for binding-peptide-coated microcantilevers as compared to that for control peptide cantilevers. Further confirmation was obtained by subsequent examination of the microcantilever arrays under a dark-field microscope. Applications of this technology will serve as a platform for the detection of pathogenic organisms including biowarfare agents.
Journal of the American Chemical Society 04/2006; 128(11):3716-21. · 9.91 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A characterization of the graphitic overlayer that forms on 4H–SiC substrates heated for ten minutes to temperatures T > 1350 °C under vacuum conditions has been performed. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy of the C-face reveals the presence of graphitic carbon with a thickness that increases with growth temperature. Parallel atomic force microscope (AFM) studies find a mesh-like network of ridges with high curvature that bound atomically flat, tile-like facets of few-layer graphene (FLG). By imaging the network that develops on FLG, it is possible to map out the regions where the elastic energy is concentrated.
Carbon.