Multiphoton Lithography of Nanocrystalline Platinum and Palladium for Site-Specific Catalysis in 3D Microenvironments
Journal of the American Chemical Society
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Journal of the American Chemical Society
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Journal of the Ameican Chemical Society - JACS
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Nature Materials
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This is the final report for the Presidential Early Career Award for Science and Engineering - PECASE (LDRD projects 93369 and 118841) awarded to Professor Yunfeng Lu (Tulane University and University of California-Los Angeles). During the last decade, mesoporous materials with tunable periodic pores have been synthesized using surfactant liquid crystalline as templates, opening a new avenue for a wide spectrum of applications. However, the applications are somewhat limited by the unfavorabe pore orientation of these materials. Although substantial effort has been devoted to align the pore channels, fabrication of mesoporous materials with perpendicular pore channels remains challenging. This project focused on fabrication of mesoporous materials with perpendicularly aligned pore channels. We demonstrated structures for use in water purification, separation, sensors, templated synthesis, microelectronics, optics, controlled release, and highly selective catalysts.
Journal of Modern Optics
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Applied Physics Letters
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Controlled assembly in soft-particle colloidal suspensions is a technology poised to advance manufacturing methods for nano-scale templating, coating, and bio-conjugate devices. Applications for soft-particle colloids include photovoltaics, nanoelectronics, functionalized thin-film coatings, and a wide range of bio-conjugate devices such as sensors, assays, and bio-fuel cells. This presentation covers the topics of modeling and simulation of soft-particle colloidal systems over dewetting, evaporation, and irradiation gradients, including deposition of particles to surfaces. By tuning particle/solvent and environmental parameters, we transition from the regime of self-assembly to that of controlled assembly, and enable finer resolution of features at both the nano-scale and meso-scale. We report models of interparticle potentials and order parametrization techniques including results from simulations of colloids utilizing soft-particle field potentials. Using LAMMPS (Large-Scale Atomic/Molecular Massively Parallel Simulator), we demonstrate effects of volume fraction, shear and drag profiles, adsorbed and bulk polymer parameters, solvent chi parameter, and deposition profiles. Results are compared to theoretical models and correlation to TEM images from soft-particle irradiation experiments.
Affordable clean water is both a global and a national security issue as lack of it can cause death, disease, and international tension. Furthermore, efficient water filtration reduces the demand for energy, another national issue. The best current solution to clean water lies in reverse osmosis (RO) membranes that remove salts from water with applied pressure, but widely used polymeric membrane technology is energy intensive and produces water depleted in useful electrolytes. Furthermore incremental improvements, based on engineering solutions rather than new materials, have yielded only modest gains in performance over the last 25 years. We have pursued a creative and innovative new approach to membrane design and development for cheap desalination membranes by approaching the problem at the molecular level of pore design. Our inspiration comes from natural biological channels, which permit faster water transport than current reverse osmosis membranes and selectively pass healthy ions. Aiming for an order-of-magnitude improvement over mature polymer technology carries significant inherent risks. The success of our fundamental research effort lies in our exploiting, extending, and integrating recent advances by our team in theory, modeling, nano-fabrication and platform development. A combined theoretical and experimental platform has been developed to understand the interplay between water flux and ion rejection in precisely-defined nano-channels. Our innovative functionalization of solid state nanoporous membranes with organic protein-mimetic polymers achieves 3-fold improvement in water flux over commercial RO membranes and has yielded a pending patent and industrial interest. Our success has generated useful contributions to energy storage, nanoscience, and membrane technology research and development important for national health and prosperity.
Heightened interest in micro-scale and nano-scale patterning by imprinting, embossing, and nano-particulate suspension coating stems from a recent surge in development of higher-throughput manufacturing methods for integrated devices. Energy-applications addressing alternative, renewable energy sources offer many examples of the need for improved manufacturing technology for micro and nano-structured films. In this presentation we address one approach to micro- and nano-pattering coating using film deposition and differential wetting of nanoparticles suspensions. Rather than print nanoparticle or colloidal inks in discontinuous patches, which typically employs ink jet printing technology, patterns can be formed with controlled dewetting of a continuously coated film. Here we report the dynamics of a volatile organic solvent laden with nanoparticles dispensed on the surfaces of water droplets, whose contact angles (surface energy) and perimeters are defined by lithographic patterning of initially (super)hydrophobic surfaces.. The lubrication flow equation together with averaged particle transport equation are employed to predict the film thickness and particle average concentration profiles during subsequent drying of the organic and water solvents. The predictions are validated by contact angle measurements, in situ grazing incidence small angle x-ray scattering experiments, and TEM images of the final nanoparticle assemblies.
SMALL
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Industrial Engineering Chemical Research
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Angewandt Chemie
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Applied Physics Letters
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Lack of robust manufacturing capabilities have limited our ability to make tailored materials with useful optical and thermal properties. For example, traditional methods such as spontaneous self-assembly of spheres cannot generate the complex structures required to produce a full bandgap photonic crystals. The goal of this work was to develop and demonstrate novel methods of directed self-assembly of nanomaterials using optical and electric fields. To achieve this aim, our work employed laser tweezers, a technology that enables non-invasive optical manipulation of particles, from glass microspheres to gold nanoparticles. Laser tweezers were used to create ordered materials with either complex crystal structures or using aspherical building blocks.
We have designed and built electrostatically actuated microvalves compatible with integration into a PDMS based microfluidic system. The key innovation for electrostatic actuation was the incorporation of carbon nanotubes into the PDMS valve membrane, allowing for electrostatic charging of the PDMS layer and subsequent discharging, while still allowing for significant distention of the valveseat for low voltage control of the system. Nanoparticles were applied to semi-cured PDMS using a stamp transfer method, and then cured fully to make the valve seats. DC actuation in air of these valves yielded operational voltages as low as 15V, by using a supporting structure above the valve seat that allowed sufficient restoring forces to be applied while not enhancing actuation forces to raise the valve actuation potential. Both actuate to open and actuate to close valves have been demonstrated, and integrated into a microfluidic platform, and demonstrated fluidic control using electrostatic valves.