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Dive into the research topics where Alan P. Bell is active.

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Featured researches published by Alan P. Bell.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Healable Luminescent Self-Assembly Supramolecular Metallogels Possessing Lanthanide (Eu/Tb) Dependent Rheological and Morphological Properties

Miguel Martínez-Calvo; Oxana Kotova; Matthias E. Möbius; Alan P. Bell; Thomas McCabe; John J. Boland; Thorfinnur Gunnlaugsson

Herein we present the use of lanthanide directed self-assembly formation (Ln(III) = Eu(III), Tb(III)) in the generation of luminescent supramolecular polymers, that when swelled with methanol give rise to self-healing supramolecular gels. These were analyzed by using luminescent and (1)H NMR titrations studies, allowing for the identification of the various species involved in the subsequent Ln(III)-gel formation. These highly luminescent gels could be mixed to give a variety of luminescent colors depending on their Eu(III):Tb(III) stoichiometric ratios. Imaging and rheological studies showed that these gels prepared using only Eu(III) or only Tb(III) have different morphological and rheological properties, that are also different from those determined upon forming gels by mixing of Eu(III) and Tb(III) gels. Hence, our results demonstrate for the first time the crucial role the lanthanide ions play in the supramolecular polymerization process, which is in principle a host-guest interaction, and consequently in the self-healing properties of the corresponding gels, which are dictated by the same host-guest interactions.


Nanoscale | 2014

Enhancing the mechanical properties of BN nanosheet–polymer composites by uniaxial drawing

Rahim Jan; Peter May; Alan P. Bell; Amir Habib; Umar Khan; Jonathan N. Coleman

We have used liquid exfoliation of hexagonal Boron-Nitride (BN) to prepare composites of BN nanosheets of three different sizes in polyvinylchloride matrices. These composites show low levels of reinforcement, consistent with poor alignment of the nanosheets as-described by a modified version of Halpin-Tsai theory. However, drawing of the composites to 300% strain results in a considerable increase in mechanical properties with the maximum composite modulus and strength both ∼×3 higher than that of the pristine polymer. In addition, the rate of increase of modulus with BN volume fraction was up to 3-fold larger than for the unstrained composites. This is higher than can be explained by drawing-induced alignment using Halpin-Tsai theory. However, the data was consistent with a combination of alignment and strain-induced de-aggregation of BN multilayers.


Nano Letters | 2012

Manipulating Connectivity and Electrical Conductivity in Metallic Nanowire Networks

Peter N. Nirmalraj; Allen T. Bellew; Alan P. Bell; Jessamyn A. Fairfield; Eoin K. McCarthy; Curtis O’Kelly; Luiz F. C. Pereira; Sophie Sorel; Diana Morosan; Jonathan N. Coleman; M. S. Ferreira; John J. Boland

Connectivity in metallic nanowire networks with resistive junctions is manipulated by applying an electric field to create materials with tunable electrical conductivity. In situ electron microscope and electrical measurements visualize the activation and evolution of connectivity within these networks. Modeling nanowire networks, having a distribution of junction breakdown voltages, reveals universal scaling behavior applicable to all network materials. We demonstrate how local connectivity within these networks can be programmed and discuss material and device applications.


Toxicological Sciences | 2016

Proinflammatory Effects of Pyrogenic and Precipitated Amorphous Silica Nanoparticles in Innate Immunity Cells

Luisana Di Cristo; Dania Movia; Massimiliano G. Bianchi; Manfredi Allegri; Bashir M. Mohamed; Alan P. Bell; Caroline Moore; Silvana Pinelli; Kirsten Rasmussen; Juan Riego-Sintes; Adriele Prina-Mello; Ovidio Bussolati; Enrico Bergamaschi

Amorphous silica nanoparticles (ASNP) can be synthetized via several processes, 2 of which are the thermal route (to yield pyrogenic silica) and the wet route from a solution containing silicate salts (to obtain precipitated, colloidal, mesoporous silica, or silica gel). Both methods of synthesis lead to ASNP that are applied as food additive (E551). Current food regulation does not require that production methods of additives are indicated on the product label, and, thus, the ASNP are listed without mentioning the production method. Recent results indicate, however, that pyrogenic ASNP are more cytotoxic than ASNP synthesized through the wet route. The present study was aimed at clarifying if 2 representative preparations of ASNP, NM-203 (pyrogenic) and NM-200 (precipitated), of comparable size, specific surface area, surface charge, and hydrodynamic radius in complete growth medium, had different effects on 2 murine macrophage cell lines (MH-S and RAW264.7 cells). Our results show that, when incubated in protein-rich fluids, NM-203 adsorbed on their surface more proteins than NM-200 and, once incubated with macrophages, elicited a greater oxidative stress, assessed from Hmox1 induction and ROS production. Flow cytometry and helium ion microscopy indicated that pyrogenic NM-203 interacted with macrophages more strongly than the precipitated NM-200 and triggered a more evident inflammatory response, evaluated with Nos2 induction, NO production and the secretion of TNF-α, IL-6 and IL-1β. Moreover, both ASNP synergized macrophage activation by bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), with a higher effect observed for NM-203. In conclusion, the results presented here demonstrate that, compared to precipitated, pyrogenic ASNP exhibit enhanced interaction with serum proteins and cell membrane, and cause a larger oxidative stress and stronger proinflammatory effects in macrophages. Therefore, these 2 nanomaterials should not be considered biologically equivalent.


Biomaterials | 2014

A safe-by-design approach to the development of gold nanoboxes as carriers for internalization into cancer cells

Dania Movia; Valerie A. Gerard; Ciaran Manus Maguire; Namrata Jain; Alan P. Bell; Valeria Nicolosi; Tiina O'Neill; Dimitri Scholz; Yurii K. Gun'ko; Yuri Volkov; Adriele Prina-Mello

Gold nanomaterials are currently raising a significant interest for human welfare in the field of clinical diagnosis, therapeutics for chronic pathologies, as well as of many other biomedical applications. In particular, gold nanomaterials are becoming a promising technology for developing novel approaches and treatments against widespread societal diseases such as cancer. In this study, we investigated the potential of proprietary gold nanoboxes (AuNBs) as carriers for their perspective translation into multifunctional, pre-clinical nano-enabled systems for personalized medicine approaches against lung cancer. A safe-by-design, tiered approach, with systematic tests conducted in the early phases on uncoated AuNBs and more focused testing on the coated, drug-loaded nanomaterial toward the end, was adopted. Our results showed that uncoated AuNBs could effectively penetrate into human lung adenocarcinoma (A549) cells when in simple (mono-cultures) or complex (co- and three-dimensional-cultures) in vitro microenvironments mimicking the alveolar region of human lungs. Uncoated AuNBs were biologically inert in A549 cells and demonstrated signs of biodegradability. Concurrently, preliminary data revealed that coated, drug-loaded AuNBs could efficiently deliver a chemotherapeutic agent to A549 cells, corroborating the hypothesis that AuNBs could be used in the future for the development of personalized nano-enabled systems for lung cancer treatment.


ACS Nano | 2015

Quantitative Study of the Photothermal Properties of Metallic Nanowire Networks

Alan P. Bell; Jessamyn A. Fairfield; Eoin K. McCarthy; Shaun Mills; John J. Boland; Guillaume Baffou; David McCloskey

In this article, we present a comprehensive investigation of the photothermal properties of plasmonic nanowire networks. We measure the local steady-state temperature increase, heat source density, and absorption in Ag, Au, and Ni metallic nanowire networks under optical illumination. This allows direct experimental confirmation of increased heat generation at the junction between two metallic nanowires and stacking-dependent absorption of polarized light. Due to thermal collective effects, the local temperature distribution in a network is shown to be completely delocalized on a micrometer scale, despite the nanoscale features in the heat source density. Comparison of the experimental temperature profile with numerical simulation allows an upper limit for the effective thermal conductivity of a Ag nanowire network to be established at 43 Wm(-1) K(-1) (0.1 κbulk).


Nanomaterials and Nanotechnology | 2014

The Morphology of Ordered Block Copolymer Patterns as Probed by High Resolution Imaging

Dipu Borah; Tandra Ghoshal; Matthew T. Shaw; Atul Chaudhari; Nikolay Petkov; Alan P. Bell; Justin D. Holmes; Michael A. Morris

The microphase separation of block copolymer (BCP) thin films can afford a simple and cost-effective means to studying nanopattern surfaces, and especially the fabrication of nanocircuitry. However, because of complex interface effects and other complications, their 3D morphology, which is often critical for application, can be more complex than first thought. Here, we describe how emerging microscopic methods may be used to study complex BCP patterns and reveal their rich detail. These methods include helium ion microscopy (HIM) and high resolution x-section transmission electron microscopy (XTEM), and complement conventional secondary electron and atomic force microscopies (SEM and TEM). These techniques reveal that these structures are quite different to what might be expected. We illustrate the advances in the understanding of BCP thin film morphology in several systems, which result from this characterization. The systems described include symmetric, lamellar forming polystyrene-b-polymethylmethacrylate (PS-b-PMMA), cylinder forming polystyrene-b-polydimethylsiloxane (PS-b-PDMS), as well as lamellar and cylinder forming patterns of polystyrene-b-polyethylene oxide (PS-b-PEO) and polystyrene-b-poly-4-vinylpyridine (PS-b-P4VP). Each of these systems exhibits more complex arrangements than might be first thought. Finding and developing techniques whereby complex morphologies, particularly at very small dimensions, can be determined is critical to the practical use of these materials in many applications. The importance of quantifying these complex morphologies has implications for their use in integrated circuit manufacture, where they are being explored as alternative pattern forming methods to conventional UV lithography.


arXiv: Materials Science | 2015

Manganese oxide nanosheets and a 2D hybrid of graphene–manganese oxide nanosheets synthesized by liquid-phase exfoliation

João Coelho; Beatriz Mendoza-Sanchez; Henrik Pettersson; Anuj Pokle; Eva McGuire; Edmund Long; Lorcan McKeon; Alan P. Bell; Valeria Nicolosi

Manganese oxide nanosheets were synthesized using liquid phase exfoliation that achieved suspensions in isopropanol with concentrations of up to 0.45 mg/ml. A study of solubility parameters showed that the exfoliation was optimum in DMF followed by isopropanol and diethylene glycol. Isopropanol was the solvent of choice due to its environmentally friendly nature and ease of use for further processing. The 2D hybrid was synthesized in isopropanol suspensions with concentrations of up to 0.5 mg/ml and demonstrated stability against reaggregation for up to six months. The coexfoliation was found to be an energetically favorable process in which both solutes, graphene and manganese oxide nanosheets, exfoliate with an improved yield as compared to the single solute exfoliation procedure. This work demonstrates the remarkable versatility of liquid phase exfoliation with respect to the synthesis of hybrids with tailored properties, and it provides proof of concept ground work for further future investigation and exploitation of hybrids made of two or more 2D nanomaterials that have key complementary properties for various technological applications.


AIP Advances | 2016

Back-gated Nb-doped MoS2 junctionless field-effect-transistors

Gioele Mirabelli; Michael Schmidt; Brendan Sheehan; K. Cherkaoui; Scott Monaghan; Ian M. Povey; Melissa McCarthy; Alan P. Bell; Roger Nagle; Felice Crupi; Paul K. Hurley; Ray Duffy

Electrical measurements were carried out to measure the performance and evaluate the characteristics of MoS2 flakes doped with Niobium (Nb). The flakes were obtained by mechanical exfoliation and transferred onto 85 nm thick SiO2 oxide and a highly doped Si handle wafer. Ti/Au (5/45 nm) deposited on top of the flake allowed the realization of a back-gate structure, which was analyzed structurally through Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM). To best of our knowledge this is the first cross-sectional TEM study of exfoliated Nb-doped MoS2 flakes. In fact to date TEM of transition-metal-dichalcogenide flakes is extremely rare in the literature, considering the recent body of work. The devices were then electrically characterized by temperature dependent Ids versus Vds and Ids versus Vbg curves. The temperature dependency of the device shows a semiconductor behavior and, the doping effect by Nb atoms introduces acceptors in the structure, with a p-type concentration 4....


Optics Express | 2015

Carrier density dependence of plasmon-enhanced nonradiative energy transfer in a hybrid quantum well-quantum dot structure

L.J. Higgins; Vasilios D. Karanikolas; Cristian A. Marocico; Alan P. Bell; T. C. Sadler; P. J. Parbrook; A. L. Bradley

An array of Ag nanoboxes fabricated by helium-ion lithography is used to demonstrate plasmon-enhanced nonradiative energy transfer in a hybrid quantum well-quantum dot structure. The nonradiative energy transfer, from an InGaN/GaN quantum well to CdSe/ZnS nanocrystal quantum dots embedded in an ~80 nm layer of PMMA, is investigated over a range of carrier densities within the quantum well. The plasmon-enhanced energy transfer efficiency is found to be independent of the carrier density, with an efficiency of 25% reported. The dependence on carrier density is observed to be the same as for conventional nonradiative energy transfer. The plasmon-coupled energy transfer enhances the QD emission by 58%. However, due to photoluminescence quenching effects an overall increase in the QD emission of 16% is observed.

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Jessamyn A. Fairfield

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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P. J. Parbrook

Tyndall National Institute

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K. Cherkaoui

Tyndall National Institute

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Melissa McCarthy

Tyndall National Institute

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Michael Schmidt

Tyndall National Institute

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