Despite high demand for gold film nanostructuring, patterning gold at the nanoscale still presents considerable challenges for current foundry-compatible processes. Here, we present a method based on abrasive-free chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) to planarize nanostructured gold surfaces with high selectivity against SiO. The method is efficient in a damascene process and industry-compatible.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotocurrents play a crucial role in various applications, including light detection, photovoltaics, and THz radiation generation. Despite the abundance of methods and materials for converting light into electrical signals, the use of metals in this context has been relatively limited. Nanostructures supporting surface plasmons in metals offer precise light manipulation and induce light-driven electron motion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacteria are mechanically resistant biological structures that can sustain physical stress. Experimental data, however, have shown that high-aspect-ratio nanopillars deform bacterial cells upon contact. If the deformation is sufficiently large, it lyses the bacterial cell wall, ultimately leading to cell death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis work demonstrates the enhancement in plasmonic sensing efficacy resulting from spatially-localized functionalization on nanostructured surfaces, whereby probe molecules are concentrated in areas of high field concentration. Comparison between SERS measurements on nanostructured surfaces (arrays of nanodisks 110 and 220 nm in diameter) with homogeneous and spatially-localized functionalization with thiophenol demonstrates that the Raman signal originates mainly from areas with high field concentration. TERS measurements with 10 nm spatial resolution confirm the field distribution profiles predicted by the numerical modeling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLabel-free biosensing, such as with surface plasmon resonance (SPR), is a highly efficient method for monitoring the responses of living cells exposed to pharmacological agents and biochemical stimuli in vitro. Conventional cell culture protocols used in cell-based biosensing generally provide little direct control over cell morphologies and phenotypes. Surface micropatterning techniques have been exploited for the controlled immobilization and establishment of well-defined cell morphologies and phenotypes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanopillars have been shown to mechanically damage bacteria, suggesting a promising strategy for future antibacterial surfaces. However, the mechanisms underlying this phenomena remain unclear, which ultimately limits translational potential toward real-world applications. Using real-time and end-point analysis techniques, we demonstrate that in contrast to initial expectations, bacteria on multiple hydrophilic "mechano-bactericidal" surfaces remained viable unless exposed to a moving air-liquid interface, which caused considerable cell death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new single-image acquisition technique for the determination of the dispersion relation of the propagating modes of a plasmonic multilayer stack is introduced. This technique is based on an electrically-driven, spectrally broad excitation source which is nanoscale in size: the inelastic electron tunnel current between the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) and the sample. The resulting light from the excited modes of the system is collected in transmission using a microscope objective.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurface plasmon resonance imaging (SPRI) is a powerful label-free imaging modality for the analysis of morphological dynamics in cell monolayers. However, classical plasmonic imaging systems have relatively poor spatial resolution along one axis due to the plasmon mode attenuation distance (tens of μm, typically), which significantly limits their ability to resolve subcellular structures. We address this limitation by adding an array of nanostructures onto the metal sensing surface (25 nm thick, 200 nm width, 400 nm period grating) to couple localized plasmons with propagating plasmons, thereby reducing attenuation length and commensurately increasing spatial imaging resolution, without significant loss of sensitivity or image contrast.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDirectional plasmon excitation and surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) emission were demonstrated for 1D and 2D gold nanostructure arrays deposited on a flat gold layer. The extinction spectrum of both arrays exhibits intense resonance bands that are redshifted when the incident angle is increased. Systematic extinction analysis of different grating periods revealed that this band can be assigned to a propagated surface plasmon of the flat gold surface that fulfills the Bragg condition of the arrays (Bragg mode).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetal nanoparticle arrays have proved useful for different applications due to their ability to enhance electromagnetic fields within a few tens of nanometers. This field enhancement results from the excitation of various plasmonic modes at certain resonance frequencies. In this article, we have studied an array of metallic nanocylinders placed on a thin metallic film.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe optical transmission and reflection in between two metalized optical fiber tips is studied in the optical near-field and far-field domains. In addition to aluminum-coated tips for near-field scanning optical microscopy (NSOM), specifically developed gold-coated fiber tips cut by focused ion beam are investigated. Transverse transmission maps of subwavelength width clearly indicate optical near-field coupling between the tips for short tip distances and become essentially Gaussian-shaped for larger distances in the far-field regime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the Caliciviridae family of nonenveloped, positive-stranded RNA viruses, Noroviruses are major causes of human and animal gastroenteritis worldwide. The Norovirus T=3 icosahedral capsid is made of 180 copies of the VP1 protein, as exemplified in the crystal structure of the virus-like particle (VLP) of the human Norwalk virus (NV). It was previously shown that the ca 40-nm recombinant NV VLP can be disassembled and reassembled in vitro.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe self-assembly kinetics for a norovirus capsid protein were probed by time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering and then analyzed by singular value decomposition and global fitting. Only three species contribute to the total scattering intensities: dimers, intermediates comprising some 11 dimers, and icosahedral T = 3 capsids made up of 90 dimers. Three-dimensional reconstructions of the intermediate robustly show a stave-like shape consistent with an arrangement of two pentameric units connected by an interstitial dimer.
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