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Publications

Towards biological applications of nanophotonic tweezers

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
R.P. Badman
F. Ye
M.D. Wang
Abstract

Optical trapping (synonymous with optical tweezers) has become a core biophysical technique widely used for interrogating fundamental biological processes on size scales ranging from the single-molecule to the cellular level. Recent advances in nanotechnology have led to the development of ‘nanophotonic tweezers,’ an exciting new class of ‘on-chip’ optical traps. Here, we describe how nanophotonic tweezers are making optical trap technology more broadly accessible and bringing unique biosensing and manipulation capabilities to biological applications of optical trapping.

Journal
Current Opinion in Chemical Biology
Date Published
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Michelle Wang Group

Flight of the fruit fly

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Itai Cohen
Abstract

There comes a time in each of our lives where we grab a thick section of the morning paper, roll it up and set off to do battle with one of nature's most accomplished aviators-the fly. If, however, instead of swatting we could magnify our view and experience the world in slow motion we would be privy to a world-class ballet full of graceful figure-eight wing strokes, effortless pirouettes, and astonishing acrobatics. After watching such a magnificent display, who among us could destroy this virtuoso? How do flies produce acrobatic maneuvers with such precision?

Journal
Physical Review Fluids
Date Published
Funding Source
1546710
61651-EG
ARO
1056662
DMR award
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

The clot thickens: Autologous and allogeneic fibrin sealants are mechanically equivalent in an ex vivo model of cartilage repair

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
R.M. Irwin
L.J. Bonassar
Itai Cohen
A.M. Matuska
J. Commins
B. Cole
L.A. Fortier
Abstract

Fibrin sealants are commonly used in cartilage repair surgeries to adhere cells or grafts into a cartilage defect. Both autologous and commercial allogeneic fibrin sealants are used in cartilage repair surgeries, yet there are no studies characterizing and comparing the mechanical properties of fibrin sealants from all-autologous sources.

Journal
PLoS ONE
Date Published
Funding Source
5R01AR071394-02
R01AR071394
1536463
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Towards efficient and stable perovskite solar cells employing non-hygroscopic F4-TCNQ doped TFB as the hole-transporting material

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
H. Kwon
J.W. Lim
J. Han
L.N. Quan
D. Kim
E.-S. Shin
Eun-Ah Kim
D.-W. Kim
Y.-Y. Noh
I. Chung
D.H. Kim
Abstract

Designing an efficient and stable hole transport layer (HTL) material is one of the essential ways to improve the performance of organic-inorganic perovskite solar cells (PSCs). Herein, for the first time, an efficient model of a hole transport material (HTM) is demonstrated by optimized doping of a conjugated polymer TFB (poly[(9,9-dioctylfluorenyl-2,7-diyl)-co-(4,4′-(N-(4-sec-butylphenyl)diphenylamine)]) with a non-hygroscopic p-type dopant F4-TCNQ (2,3,5,6-tetrafluoro-7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane) for high-efficiency PSCs.

Journal
Nanoscale
Date Published
Group (Lab)

Low temperature hidden Fermi-liquid charge transport in under doped LaxSr1-xCuO2 infinite layer electron-doped thin films

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
C. Sacco
A. Galdi
P. Orgiani
N. Coppola
H.I. Wei
R. Arpaia
S. Charpentier
F. Lombardi
B. Goodge
L.F. Kourkoutis
K. Shen
D.G. Schlom
L. Maritato
Abstract

We have studied the low temperature electrical transport properties of LaxSr1-xCuO2 thin films grown by oxide molecular beam epitaxy on (1 1 0) GdScO3 and TbScO3 substrates. The transmission electron microscopy measurements and the x-ray diffraction analysis confirmed the epitaxy of the obtained films and the study of their normal state transport properties, removing the ambiguity regarding the truly conducting layer, allowed to highlight the presence of a robust hidden Fermi liquid charge transport in the low temperature properties of infinite layer electron doped cuprate superconductors.

Journal
Journal of Physics Condensed Matter
Date Published
Funding Source
1719875
Group (Lab)
Kyle Shen Group

Ferroelectric properties of ion-irradiated bismuth ferrite layers grown via molecular-beam epitaxy

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Antonio Mei
Sahar Saremi
Ludi Miao
Matthew Barone
Yongjian Tang
Cyrus Zeledon
Jürgen Schubert
Daniel Ralph
Lane Martin
Darrell Schlom
Abstract

We systematically investigate the role of defects, introduced by varying synthesis conditions and by carrying out ion irradiation treatments, on the structural and ferroelectric properties of commensurately strained bismuth ferrite BixFe2-xO3 layers grown on SrRuO3-coated DyScO3(110)o substrates using adsorption-controlled ozone molecular-beam epitaxy. Our findings highlight ion irradiation as an effective approach for reducing through-layer electrical leakage, a necessary condition for the development of reliable ferroelectrics-based electronics. © 2019 Author(s).

Journal
AIP Publishing
Date Published
Funding Source
1708615
1719875
1740286
SRC

Layer-dependent spin-orbit torques generated by the centrosymmetric transition metal dichalcogenide β−MoTe2

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Gregory Stiehl
Ruofan Li
Vishakha Gupta
Ismail Baggari
Shengwei Jiang
Hongchao Xie
Lena Kourkoutis
Kin Mak
Jie Shan
Robert Buhrman
Daniel Ralph
Abstract

Single-crystal materials with sufficiently low crystal symmetry and strong spin-orbit interactions can be used to generate novel forms of spin-orbit torques on adjacent ferromagnets, such as the out-of-plane antidamping torque previously observed in WTe2/ferromagnet heterostructures. Here, we present measurements of spin-orbit torques produced by the low-symmetry material β-MoTe2, which, unlike WTe2, retains bulk inversion symmetry.

Journal
American Physical Society (APS)
Date Published
Funding Source
1429155
1542081
Group (Lab)
Jie Shan Group
Kin Fai Mak Group

MoS2 pixel arrays for real-time photoluminescence imaging of redox molecules

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M.F. Reynolds
M.H.D. Guimarães
H. Gao
K. Kang
A.J. Cortese
D.C. Ralph
J. Park
P.L. McEuen
Abstract

Measuring the behavior of redox-active molecules in space and time is crucial for understanding chemical and biological systems and for developing new technologies. Optical schemes are noninvasive and scalable, but usually have a slow response compared to electrical detection methods. Furthermore, many fluorescent molecules for redox detection degrade in brightness over long exposure times. Here, we show that the photoluminescence of “pixel” arrays of monolayer MoS2 can image spatial and temporal changes in redox molecule concentration.

Journal
Science Advances
Date Published
Funding Source
ECCS-1542081
NSF DMR-1420709
DMR-1719875
FA9550-16-1-0031
680-50-1311
Group (Lab)
Paul McEuen Group

Resolution and dose dependence of radiation damage in biomolecular systems

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
H. Atakisi
L. Conger
D.W. Moreau
R.E. Thorne
Abstract

The local Fourier-space relation between diffracted intensity I, diffraction wavevector q and dose D, , is key to probing and understanding radiation damage by X-rays and energetic particles in both diffraction and imaging experiments. The models used in protein crystallography for the last 50 years provide good fits to experimental I(q) versus nominal dose data, but have unclear physical significance. More recently, a fit to diffraction and imaging experiments suggested that the maximum tolerable dose varies as q -1 or linearly with resolution.

Journal
IUCrJ
Date Published
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Robert Thorne Group

Solvent flows, conformation changes and lattice reordering in a cold protein crystal

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
D.W. Moreau
H. Atakisi
R.E. Thorne
Abstract

When protein crystals are abruptly cooled, the unit-cell, protein and solvent-cavity volumes all contract, but the volume of bulk-like internal solvent may expand. Outflow of this solvent from the unit cell and its accumulation in defective interior crystal regions has been suggested as one cause of the large increase in crystal mosaicity on cooling. It is shown that when apoferritin crystals are abruptly cooled to temperatures between 220 and 260 K, the unit cell contracts, solvent is pushed out and the mosaicity grows.

Journal
Acta Crystallographica Section D: Structural Biology
Date Published
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Robert Thorne Group