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Publications

Real-time vibrations of a carbon nanotube

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
A.W. Barnard
M. Zhang
G.S. Wiederhecker
M. Lipson
P.L. McEuen
Abstract

The field of miniature mechanical oscillators is rapidly evolving, with emerging applications including signal processing, biological detection1 and fundamental tests of quantum mechanics2. As the dimensions of a mechanical oscillator shrink to the molecular scale, such as in a carbon nanotube resonator3–7, their vibrations become increasingly coupled and strongly interacting8,9 until even weak thermal fluctuations could make the oscillator nonlinear10–13.

Journal
Nature
Date Published
Funding Source
DGE-0654193
ECCS-1542081
DMR-1719875
0928552
2012/17765-7
Group (Lab)
Paul McEuen Group

A 250 μm × 57 μm Microscale Opto-electronically Transduced Electrodes (MOTEs) for Neural Recording

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
S. Lee
A.J. Cortese
A.P. Gandhi
E.R. Agger
P.L. McEuen
A.C. Molnar
Abstract

Recording neural activity in live animals in vivo with minimal tissue damage is one of the major barriers to understanding the nervous system. This paper presents the technology for a tetherless opto-electronic neural interface based on 180 nm CMOS circuits, heterogeneously integrated with an AlGaAs diode that functions as both a photovoltaic and light emitting diode.

Journal
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1120296
ECCS-1542081
R21EY027581
Group (Lab)
Paul McEuen Group

Young's modulus and thermal expansion of tensioned graphene membranes

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
I.R. Storch
R. De Alba
V.P. Adiga
T.S. Abhilash
R.A. Barton
H.G. Craighead
J.M. Parpia
P.L. McEuen
Abstract

Tensioned graphene membranes are of interest both for fundamental physics and for applications ranging from water filtration to nanomechanical resonators. It is generally assumed that these membranes have a stretching modulus of about 340 N/m and a negative, temperature-independent thermal expansion coefficient due to transverse phonon modes. In this paper, we study the two-dimensional Young's modulus and thermal expansion of graphene as functions of temperature by using laser interferometry to detect the static displacement of the membrane in a cryostat.

Journal
Physical Review B
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1719875
ECCS-1542081
DGE-0903653
FA9550-16-1-0031
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group
Paul McEuen Group

A 330μm×90μm opto-electronically integrated wireless system-on-chip for recording of neural activities

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
S. Lee
A.J. Cortese
P. Trexel
E.R. Agger
P.L. McEuen
A.C. Molnar
Abstract

Recording neural activity in live animals in vivo poses several challenges. Electrical techniques typically require electrodes to be tethered to the outside world directly via a wire, or indirectly via an RF Coil [1], which is much larger than the electrodes themselves. Tethered implants result in residual motion between neurons and electrodes as the brain moves, and limits our ability to measure from peripheral nerves in moving animals, especially in smaller organisms such as zebra fish or fruit flies.

Conference Name
.
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1719875
1R21EY027581
Group (Lab)
Paul McEuen Group

Graphene-based bimorphs for micron-sized, tautonomous origami machines

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M.Z. Miskin
K.J. Dorsey
B. Bircan
Y. Han
D.A. Muller
P.L. McEuen
Itai Cohen
Abstract

Origami-inspired fabrication presents an attractive platform for miniaturizing machines: thinner layers of folding material lead to smaller devices, provided that key functional aspects, such as conductivity, stiffness, and flexibility, are persevered. Here, we show origami fabrication at its ultimate limit by using 2D atomic membranes as a folding material. As a prototype, we bond graphene sheets to nanometer-thick layers of glass to make ultrathin bimorph actuators that bend to micrometer radii of curvature in response to small strain differentials.

Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Date Published
Funding Source
FA2386-13-1-4118
1719875
DMR-1429155
ECCS-0335765
DMR-1719875
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group
Paul McEuen Group

Measuring and Manipulating the Adhesion of Graphene

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M.Z. Miskin
C. Sun
Itai Cohen
W.R. Dichtel
P.L. McEuen
Abstract

We present a technique to precisely measure the surface energies between two-dimensional materials and substrates that is simple to implement and allows exploration of spatial and chemical control of adhesion at the nanoscale. As an example, we characterize the delamination of single-layer graphene from monolayers of pyrene tethered to glass in water and maximize the work of separation between these surfaces by varying the density of pyrene groups in the monolayer. Control of this energy scale enables high-fidelity graphene-transfer protocols that can resist failure under sonication.

Journal
Nano Letters
Date Published
Funding Source
ECCS-1542081
1719875
DMR-1719875
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group
Paul McEuen Group

Tunable excitons in bilayer graphene

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
L. Ju
L. Wang
T. Cao
T. Taniguchi
K. Watanabe
S.G. Louie
F. Rana
J. Park
J. Hone
F. Wang
P.L. McEuen
Abstract

Excitons, the bound states of an electron and a hole in a solid material, play a key role in the optical properties of insulators and semiconductors. Here, we report the observation of excitons in bilayer graphene (BLG) using photocurrent spectroscopy of high-quality BLG encapsulated in hexagonal boron nitride. We observed two prominent excitonic resonances with narrow line widths that are tunable from the mid-infrared to the terahertz range.

Journal
Science
Date Published
Funding Source
1741694
ECCS-1542081
SRC
FA9550-16-1-0031
DMR-1120296
Group (Lab)
Paul McEuen Group

Tunable phonon-cavity coupling in graphene membranes

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
R. De Alba
F. Massel
I.R. Storch
T.S. Abhilash
A. Hui
P.L. McEuen
H.G. Craighead
J.M. Parpia
Abstract

A major achievement of the past decade has been the realization of macroscopic quantum systems by exploiting the interactions between optical cavities and mechanical resonators. In these systems, phonons are coherently annihilated or created in exchange for photons. Similar phenomena have recently been observed through phonon-cavity coupling - energy exchange between the modes of a single system mediated by intrinsic material nonlinearity.

Journal
Nature Nanotechnology
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-1120296
ECCS-15420819
Group (Lab)
Jeevak Parpia Group
Paul McEuen Group

Determination of the Thermal Noise Limit of Graphene Biotransistors

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M.S. Crosser
M.A. Brown
P.L. McEuen
E.D. Minot
Abstract

To determine the thermal noise limit of graphene biotransistors, we have measured the complex impedance between the basal plane of single-layer graphene and an aqueous electrolyte. The impedance is dominated by an imaginary component but has a finite real component. Invoking the fluctuation-dissipation theorem, we determine the power spectral density of thermally driven voltage fluctuations at the graphene/electrolyte interface. The fluctuations have 1/fp dependence, with p = 0.75-0.85, and the magnitude of fluctuations scales inversely with area.

Journal
Nano Letters
Date Published
Funding Source
1450853
1450967
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Paul McEuen Group

Magnetically Actuated Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
S.P. Roberts
A.W. Barnard
C.M. Martin
M.K. Blees
J.S. Alden
A.R. Ruyack
P.L. McEuen
Abstract

We couple magnetic tweezer techniques with standard lithography methods to make magnetically actuated single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) devices. Parallel arrays of 4-10 m-long SWNT cantilevers are patterned with one end anchored to the substrate and the other end attached to a micron-scale iron magnetic tag that is free to move in solution. Thermal fluctuations of this tag provide a direct measurement of the spring constant of the SWNT cantilevers, yielding values of 10-7-10-8 N/m.

Journal
Nano Letters
Date Published
Funding Source
0928552
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Paul McEuen Group