This study introduces a facile method for the substrate-independent deposition of pheomelanin-like films, revealing unique and promising electrical characteristics. The conventional darkening of a dopamine solution at a basic pH was significantly delayed by the addition of l-cysteine, resulting in a distinctive temporal pattern: an initial quiescent period without apparent color change followed by an abrupt and explosive burst. Surprisingly, within the quiescent period, the deposition of ultrathin and smooth pheomelanin-like films was observed, in addition to rough and thick films formed after the burst.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
January 2024
One-dimensional ZnO nanorods (NRs) have been extensively studied as photoanodes because of their unique optical properties, high electron mobility, and suitable band positions for water oxidation. However, their practical efficiency is often compromised by chemical instability during water oxidation and high carrier recombination rates. To overcome this issue, precise morphological control of ZnO@ZnWO core-shell structured photoanodes, featuring a ZnO core and a ZnWO shell was used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQuantitative determination and in situ monitoring of molecular chirality at extremely low concentrations is still challenging with simple optics because of the molecular-scale mismatch with the incident light wavelength. Advances in spectroscopy and nanophotonics have successfully lowered the detection limit in enantioselective sensing, as it can bring the microscopic chiral characteristics of molecules into the macroscopic scale or squeeze the chiral light into the subwavelength scale. Conventional nanophotonic approaches depend mainly on the optical helicity density by localized resonances within an individual structure, such as localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPRs) or dielectric Mie resonances.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe evolution of "smart life," which connects all internet-of-things (IoT) microdevices and microsensors under wireless communication grids, requires microscale energy storage devices with high power and energy density and long-term cyclability to integrate them with sustainable power generators. Instead of Li-ion batteries with a short lifetime, pseudocapacitors with longer or infinite cyclability and high-power density have been considered as efficient energy storage devices for IoT. However, the design and fabrication of microscale pseudocapacitors have difficulties in patterning microscale electrodes when loading active materials at specific points of the electrodes using conventional microfabrication methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSelf-emitting blue and red EuOX (X = F, Cl, Br, and I) were successfully synthesized and characterized. Far-infrared and Raman measurements revealed that the vibration modes prominently reflected the Eu-O and Eu-X bond characters of these materials. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) of the red-emitting EuOX compounds showed that Eu exclusively existed as Eu3+, while in the blue-emitting EuOX, a mixed Eu3+/Eu2+ state was observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper describes a one-step, chemical-free method to generate micropatterned in vitro neuronal networks on chemically unmodified reduced graphene oxide. The suggested method relies on infrared-based photothermal reduction of graphene oxide, which concurrently leads to the formation of submicrometer-scale surface roughness that promotes neuronal adhesion and guides neurite outgrowth. A commercially available laser source (LightScribe DVD drive) controlled by a computer software can be used to reduce graphene oxide (GO), and its repetitive scribing to a GO film brings about gradual increase and decrease in electrical conductivity and neurite guiding ability of the scribed regions, respectively.
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