Publications by authors named "Jeffrey E Melzer"

G-protein coupled receptors help regulate cellular function and communication, and are targets of small molecule drug discovery efforts. Conventional techniques to probe these interactions require labels and large amounts of receptor to achieve satisfactory sensitivity. Here, we use frequency-locked optical microtoroids for label-free characterization of membrane interactions in vitro at zeptomolar concentrations for the kappa opioid receptor and its native agonist dynorphin A 1-13, as well as big dynorphin (dynorphin A and dynorphin B) using a supported biomimetic membrane.

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Binding events to elements of the cell membrane act as receptors which regulate cellular function and communication and are the targets of many small molecule drug discovery efforts for agonists and antagonists. Conventional techniques to probe these interactions generally require labels and large amounts of receptor to achieve satisfactory sensitivity. Whispering gallery mode microtoroid optical resonators have demonstrated sensitivity to detect single-molecule binding events.

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Current commercial air-quality monitoring devices lack a large dynamic range, especially at the small, ultrafine size scale. Furthermore, there is a low density of air-quality monitoring stations, reducing the precision with which local particulate matter hazards can be tracked. Here, we show a low-cost, lensfree, and portable air-quality monitoring device (LPAQD) that can detect and measure micron-sized particles down to 100 nm-sized particles, with the capability to track and measure particles in real time throughout a day and the ability to accurately measure particulate matter densities as low as 3 μg m.

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The fabrication of three-dimensional (3D) microscale structures is critical for many applications, including strong and lightweight material development, medical device fabrication, microrobotics, and photonic applications. While 3D microfabrication has seen progress over the past decades, complex multicomponent integration with small or hierarchical feature sizes is still a challenge. In this study, an optical positioning and linking (OPAL) platform based on optical tweezers is used to precisely fabricate 3D microstructures from two types of micron-scale building blocks linked by biochemical interactions.

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Lens-free holographic microscopy offers sub-micron resolution over an ultra-large field-of-view >20 mm, making it suitable for bio-sensing applications that require the detection of small targets at low concentrations. Various pixel super-resolution techniques have been shown to enhance resolution and boost signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) by combining multiple partially-redundant low-resolution frames. However, it has been unclear which technique performs best for small-target sensing.

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Optical tweezers are a noncontact method of 3D positioning applicable to the fields of micro- and nanomanipulation and assembly, among others. In these applications, the ability to manipulate particles over relatively long distances at high speed is essential in determining overall process efficiency and throughput. In order to maximize manipulation speeds, it is necessary to increase the trapping laser power, which is often accompanied by undesirable heating effects due to material absorption.

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Manifestation of Čerenkov radiation as a contaminating signal is a significant issue in radiation therapy dose measurement by fiber-coupled scintillator dosimeters. To enhance the scintillation signal transmission while minimizing Čerenkov radiation contamination, we designed a fiber probe using a silver-only coated hollow waveguide (HWG). The HWG with scintillator inserted in its tip, embedded in tissue-mimicking phantoms, was irradiated with clinical electron and photon beams generated by a medical linear accelerator.

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Metal/dielectric-coated hollow glass waveguides (HGWs) have been studied extensively for the efficient transmission of radiation over a broad spectral range. In this study, a low-absorption optical polymer, cyclic olefin copolymer (COC), is investigated as a dielectric material for HGWs designed for the delivery of various IR lasers. Using established silver (Ag) plating techniques and a newly optimized polymer-coating procedure, Ag/COC HGWs with low attenuation coefficients are fabricated for operation at the following three wavelengths: 808 nm, 1.

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This analysis explores the theory and design of dielectric multilayer reflection-enhancing thin film stacks based on high and low refractive index alternating layers of cadmium sulfide (CdS) and lead sulfide (PbS) on silver (Ag)-coated hollow glass waveguides (HGWs) for low loss transmission at midinfrared wavelengths. The fundamentals for determining propagation losses in such multilayer thin-film-coated Ag hollow waveguides is thoroughly discussed, and forms the basis for further theoretical analysis presented in this study. The effects on propagation loss resulting from several key parameters of these multilayer thin film stacks is further explored in order to bridge the gap between results predicted through calculation under ideal conditions and deviations from such ideal models that often arise in practice.

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A low-loss and low-dispersive optical-fiber-like hybrid HE₁₁ mode is developed within a wide band in metallic hollow waveguides if their inner walls are coated with a thin dielectric layer. We investigate terahertz (THz) transmission losses from 0.5 to 5.

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This study involves the fabrication and characterization of improved quality silver (Ag)/polystyrene (PS) thin-film-coated hollow-glass waveguides for the low-loss transmission of terahertz radiation via modified dynamic liquid phase deposition techniques. High-quality PS thin films were deposited from aqueous PS solutions, and the spectral response of fabricated samples was measured from λ=1-100 μm. Fabricated samples exhibited highly defined spectral responses throughout this entire range indicative of PS films of excellent quality.

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Silver/silver halide-coated hollow-glass waveguides (HGWs) are capable of low-loss, broadband transmission at infrared wavelengths with the advantage of optical response tunability through alteration of a number of key design parameters. Generally, the design of circular HGWs has primarily involved optimization of the waveguide bore size and deposited film structure in order to obtain the desired optical response, with the waveguide bore size being held constant as a function of length. In this study, the effects of HGW structures consisting of linearly tapered inner diameters on the optical response at infrared wavelengths are theoretically and experimentally investigated.

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