Publications by authors named "Neel N"

Single metallocene molecules act as sensitive spin detectors when decorating the probe of a scanning tunneling microscope (STM). However, the impact of the atomic-scale electrode details on the molecular spin state has remained elusive to date. Here, a nickelocene (Nc) STM junction is manipulated in an atomwise manner showing clearly the dependence of the spin excitation spectrum on the anchoring of Nc to Cu(111), a Cu monomer, and trimer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vibrational quanta of melamine and its tautomer are analyzed at the single-molecule level on Cu(100) with inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy. The on-surface tautomerization gives rise to markedly different low-energy vibrational spectra of the isomers, as evidenced by a shift in mode energies and a variation in inelastic cross sections. Spatially resolved spectroscopy reveals the maximum signal strength on an orbital nodal plane, excluding resonant inelastic tunneling as the mechanism underlying the quantum excitations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Low-energy argon ion bombardment of graphene on Ir(111) induces atomic-scale defects at the surface. Using a scanning tunneling microscope, the two smallest defects appear as a depression without discernible interior structure suggesting the presence of vacancy sites in the graphene lattice. With an atomic force microscope, however, only one kind can be identified as a vacancy defect with four missing carbon atoms, while the other kind reveals an intact graphene sheet.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Colorectal cancer (CRC) patients often develop liver metastasis. However, curative resection of liver metastasis is not always possible due to poor visualization of tumor margins. The present study reports the characterization of a humanized anti-carcinoembryonic antigen monoclonal antibody conjugated to a PEGylated near-infrared dye, that targets and brightly labels human CRC tumors in metastatic orthotopic mouse models.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Identifying metastatic pancreatic cancer accurately is essential for determining the right treatment, with mucin 5AC being a specific marker overexpressed in cancer cells but not found in normal pancreatic tissue.
  • - A study tested an anti-mucin 5AC antibody linked to an IR800 dye (MUC5AC-IR800) in a patient-derived orthotopic xenograft (PDOX) model to visualize liver metastases of pancreatic cancer.
  • - Results showed that MUC5AC-IR800 effectively highlights liver metastasis, with potential applications in surgical staging and fluorescence-guided surgery, enhancing visualization during medical procedures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Poor visualization of polyps can limit colorectal cancer screening. Fluorescent antibodies to mucin5AC (MUC5AC), a glycoprotein upregulated in adenomas and colorectal cancer, could improve screening colonoscopy polyp detection rate. Adenomatous polyposis coli flox mice with a transgene () develop colonic polyps that contain both dysplastic and malignant tissue.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Atomic-scale spatial characteristics of a phthalocyanine orbital and skeleton are obtained on a metal surface with a scanning tunneling microscope and a CO-functionalized tip. Intriguingly, the high spatial resolution of the intramolecular electronic patterns is achieved without resonant tunneling into the orbital and despite the hybridization of the molecule with the reactive Cu substrate. The resolution can be fine-tuned by the tip-molecule distance, which controls the -wave and -wave contribution of the molecular probe to the imaging process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - The hydrogen removal from a phthalocyanine molecule on graphene enhances its ability to sense vibrations (phonons) in the graphene layer.
  • - Inelastic electron transport observed using a scanning tunneling microscope shows significant amplification when interacting with specific graphene phonons.
  • - The enhanced electron current is linked to a resonance effect near the Fermi energy and the coupling of certain phonon modes to the molecule's vibrational states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The exchange interaction of a brominated Co-porphyrin molecule with the Cooper pair condensate of Pb(111) is modified by reducing the Co-surface separation. The stepwise dehalogenation and dephenylation change the Co adsorption height by a few picometers. Only the residual Co-porphine core exhibits a Yu-Shiba-Rusinov bound state with low binding energy in the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer energy gap.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intentionally terminating scanning probes with a single atom or molecule belongs to a rapidly growing field in the quantum chemistry and physics at surfaces. However, the detailed understanding of the coupling between the probe and adsorbate is in its infancy. Here, an atomic force microscopy probe functionalized with a single CO molecule is approached with picometer control to two conformational isomers of Ag-phthalocyanine adsorbed on Ag(111).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A CO-functionalized atomic force microscope tip is used to locally probe local chemical reactivity and subtle structural relaxations of a single phthalocyanine molecule at different stages of pyrrolic-H abstraction. Spatially resolved vertical force spectroscopy unveils a variation of the maximum short-range attraction between CO and intramolecular sites, which is interpreted as a measure for the local chemical reactivity. In addition, the vertical position of the point of maximum attraction is observed to vary across the molecules.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: There is a high rate of positive surgical margins with resection of liver metastases in colorectal cancer (CRC). The present study reports using a fluorescent anti-mucin 4 (MUC4) antibodies to label primary CRC and liver metastases to better visualize tumor margins in mouse models.

Methods: Western blotting for MUC4 protein expression of normal colon and CRC tumor lysates was performed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An atomic force microscope is used to determine the attractive interaction at the verge of adding a Ag atom from the probe to a single free-base phthalocyanine molecule adsorbed on Ag(111). The experimentally extracted energy for the spontaneous atom transfer can be compared to the energy profile determined by density functional theory using the nudged-elastic-band method at a defined probe-sample distance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Medical students experience rising rates of burnout throughout their training. Efforts have been made to not only mitigate its negative effects, but also prevent its development. Medical improv takes the basic ideas of improvisational theatre and applies them to clinical situations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the studies presented here, the subsequent growth of graphene on hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) is achieved by the thermal decomposition of molecular precursors and the catalytic assistance of metal substrates. The epitaxial growth of h-BN on Pt(111) is followed by the deposition of a temporary Pt film that acts as a catalyst for the fabrication of the graphene sheet. After intercalation of the intermediate Pt film underneath the boron-nitride mesh, graphene resides on top of h-BN.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Graphene phonons are excited by the local injection of electrons and holes from the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope. Despite the strong graphene-Ru(0001) hybridization, monolayer graphene unexpectedly exhibits pronounced phonon signatures in inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy. Spatially resolved spectroscopy reveals that the strength of the phonon signal depends on the site of the moiré lattice with a substantial red-shift of phonon energies compared to those of free graphene.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We expose the polar covalent bond between a single Au atom terminating the apex of an atomic force microscope tip and a C atom of graphene on SiC(0001) to an external electric field. For one field orientation, the Au─C bond is strong enough to sustain the mechanical load of partially detached graphene, while for the opposite orientation, the bond breaks easily. Calculations based on density-functional theory and nonequilibrium Green's function methods support the experimental observations by unveiling bond forces that reflect the polar character of the bond.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The control and observation of reactants forming a chemical bond at the single-molecule level is a long-standing challenge in quantum physics and chemistry. Using a single CO molecule adsorbed at the apex of an atomic force microscope tip together with a Cu(111) surface, bending of the molecular probe is induced by torques due to van der Waals attraction and Pauli repulsion. As a result, the vertical force between CO and Cu(111) exhibits a characteristic dip-hump evolution with the molecule-surface separation, which depends sensitively on the initial tilt angle the CO axis encloses with the surface normal.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rubrene (CH) was adsorbed with submonolayer coverage on Pt(111), Au(111), and graphene-covered Pt(111). Adsorption phases and vibronic properties of CH consistently reflect the progressive reduction of the molecule-substrate hybridization. Separate CH clusters are observed on Pt(111) as well as broad molecular resonances.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The efficiency of hexagonal boron nitride and graphene to separate the hydrocarbon molecule CH from Ru(0001) and Pt(111) surfaces is explored in low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy experiments. Both 2D materials enable the observation of the Franck-Condon effect in both frontier orbitals. On hexagonal boron nitride, vibronic progression with two vibrational energies gives rise to sharp orbital sidebands that are clearly visible up to the second order of the vibrational quantum number with different Huang-Rhys factors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on linear atomic clusters made of Co and Cu, specifically CoCu, to investigate differences in the Kondo effect at two cobalt (Co) sites.
  • Adding one copper (Cu) atom to the edge of the Co chain significantly decreases the intensity of the Kondo resonance for that particular Co atom, while also reducing its resonance width by more than half.
  • Meanwhile, the Kondo effect at the opposite edge Co atom is unaffected, suggesting that the cluster's linear structure and hybridization play key roles in this behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Passing a current across two touching C molecules imposes a nonequilibrium population of bonding and antibonding molecular orbitals, which changes the equilibrium bond character and strength. A current-induced bond force therefore contributes to the total force at chemical-bond distances. The combination of first-principles calculations with scanning probe experiments exploring currents and forces in a wide C-C distance range consistently evidences the presence of current-induced attraction that occurs when the two molecules are on the verge of forming a chemical bond.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF