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Dive into the research topics where Andrew M. Dattelbaum is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew M. Dattelbaum.


Expert Review of Proteomics | 2006

Surface-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry

Andrew M. Dattelbaum; Srinivas Iyer

Laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MS) is rapidly growing in popularity as an analytical characterization method in several fields. The technique shot to prominence using matrix-assisted desorption/ionization for large biomolecules (>700 Da), such as proteins, peptides and nucleic acids. However, because the matrix, which consists of small organic molecules, is also ionized, the technique is of limited use in the low-molecular-mass range (<700 Da). Recent advances in surface science have facilitated the development of matrix-free laser desorption/ionization MS approaches, which are referred to here as surface-assisted laser desorption/ionization (SALDI) MS. In contrast to traditional matrix-assisted techniques, the materials used for SALDI-MS are not ionized, which expands the usefulness of this technique to small-molecule analyses. This review discusses the current status of SALDI-MS as a standard analytical technique, with an emphasis on potential applications in proteomics.


ACS Nano | 2008

Fluorescent single walled carbon nanotube/silica composite materials.

B. C. Satishkumar; Stephen K. Doorn; Gary A. Baker; Andrew M. Dattelbaum

We present a new approach for the preparation of single walled carbon nanotube silica composite materials that retain the intrinsic fluorescence characteristics of the encapsulated nanotubes. Incorporation of isolated nanotubes into optically transparent matrices, such as sol-gel prepared silica, to take advantage of their near-infrared emission properties for applications like sensing has been a challenging task. In general, the alcohol solvents and acidic conditions required for typical sol-gel preparations disrupt the nanotube/surfactant assembly and cause the isolated nanotubes to aggregate leading to degradation of their fluorescence properties. To overcome these issues, we have used a sugar alcohol modified silica precursor molecule, diglycerylsilane, for encapsulation of nanotubes in silica under aqueous conditions and at neutral pH. The silica/nanotube composite materials have been prepared as monoliths, at least 5 mm thick, or as films (<1 mm) and were characterized using fluorescence and Raman spectroscopy. In the present work we have investigated the fluorescence characteristics of the silica encapsulated carbon nanotubes by means of redox doping studies as well as demonstrated their potential for biosensing applications. Such nanotube/silica composite systems may allow for new sensing and imaging applications that are not currently achievable.


ACS Nano | 2011

Fluorescent Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Aerogels in Surfactant-free Environments

Juan G. Duque; Christopher E. Hamilton; Gautam Gupta; Scott A. Crooker; Jared Crochet; Aditya D. Mohite; Han Htoon; Kimberly A. Obrey; Andrew M. Dattelbaum; Stephen K. Doorn

A general challenge in generating functional materials from nanoscale components is integrating them into useful composites that retain or enhance their properties of interest. Development of single walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) materials for optoelectronics and sensing has been especially challenging in that SWNT optical and electronic properties are highly sensitive to environmental interactions, which can be particularly severe in composite matrices. Percolation of SWNTs into aqueous silica gels shows promise as an important route for exploiting their properties, but retention of the aqueous and surfactant environment still impacts and limits optical response, while also limiting the range of conditions in which these materials may be applied. Here, we present for the first time an innovative approach to obtain highly fluorescent solution-free SWNT-silica aerogels, which provides access to novel photophysical properties. Strongly blue-shifted spectral features, revelation of new diameter-dependent gas-phase adsorption phenomena, and significant increase (approximately three times that at room temperature) in photoluminescence intensities at cryogenic temperatures all indicate greatly reduced SWNT-matrix interactions consistent with the SWNTs experiencing a surfactant-free environment. The results demonstrate that this solid-state nanomaterial will play an important role in further revealing the true intrinsic SWNT chemical and photophysical behaviors and represent for the first time a promising new solution- and surfactant-free material for advancing SWNT applications in sensing, photonics, and optoelectronics.


Physical Review B | 2012

Intraband conductivity response in graphene observed using ultrafast infrared-pump visible-probe spectroscopy

Keshav M. Dani; Junhyuk Lee; R. Sharma; Aditya Mohite; Charudatta Galande; Pulickel M. Ajayan; Andrew M. Dattelbaum; Han Htoon; Antoinette J. Taylor; Rohit P. Prasankumar

Graphene, a monolayer of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal pattern, provides a unique two-dimensional (2D) system exhibiting exotic phenomena such as quantum Hall effects, massless Dirac quasiparticle excitations and universal absorption&conductivity. The linear energy-momentum dispersion relation in graphene also offers the opportunity to mimic the physics of far-away relativistic particles like neutron stars and white dwarfs. In this letter, we perform a counterintuitive ultrafast pump-probe experiment with high photon energies to isolate the Drude-like intraband dynamics of photoexcited carriers. We directly demonstrate the relativistic nature of the photoexcited Dirac quasiparticles by observing a nonlinear scaling of the response with the density of photoexcited carriers. This is in striking contrast to the linear scaling that is usually observed in conventional materials. Our results also indicate strong electron-phonon coupling in graphene, leading to a sub-100 femtosecond thermalization between high energy photoexcited carriers and optical phonons.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2009

PEGylation of a Maltose Biosensor Promotes Enhanced Signal Response When Immobilized in a Silica Sol-Gel

Andrew M. Dattelbaum; Gary A. Baker; John M. Fox; Srinivas Iyer; Jonathan D. Dattelbaum

A robust method to immobilize a maltose biosensor is described using an engineered maltose periplasmic binding protein (PBP) covalently coupled to NBDamide, an environmentally sensitive fluorophore. A mesoporous silica sol-gel derived from diglycerylsilane (DGS) was constructed to embed the maltose biosensor, and the ligand reporting fluorescence properties were measured. When sequestered in the DGS-derived silica matrix, the biosensor retained maltose-dependent fluorescence sensing capability with micromolar affinity, which is consistent with the protein free in solution. The MBP-NBD conjugate was further modified by covalent conjugation with poly(ethylene glycol)-5000 (PEG) to promote the retention of water molecules around the protein and to reduce possible steric effects between the silica matrix and protein. Bioconjugation with PEG molecules does not significantly affect the signaling response of the protein in solution. When immobilized in the DGS polymer, a consistent increase in fluorescence intensity was observed as compared to the protein not functionalized with PEG. To our knowledge, this report presents the first successful method to embed a PBP biosensor in a polymerized matrix and retain signaling response using an environmentally sensitive probe. The immobilization method presented here should be easily adaptable to all conformation-dependent biosensors.


Science Advances | 2016

Critical role of intercalated water for electrocatalytically active nitrogen-doped graphitic systems

Ulises Martinez; Joseph H Dumont; Edward F. Holby; Kateryna Artyushkova; Geraldine M Purdy; Akhilesh Singh; Plamen Atanassov; David A. Cullen; Karren L. More; Manish Chhowalla; Piotr Zelenay; Andrew M. Dattelbaum; Aditya D. Mohite; Gautam Gupta

Removal of intercalated water within graphitic sheets is critical to achieving high-performing oxygen reduction reaction catalysts. Graphitic materials are essential in energy conversion and storage because of their excellent chemical and electrical properties. The strategy for obtaining functional graphitic materials involves graphite oxidation and subsequent dissolution in aqueous media, forming graphene-oxide nanosheets (GNs). Restacked GNs contain substantial intercalated water that can react with heteroatom dopants or the graphene lattice during reduction. We demonstrate that removal of intercalated water using simple solvent treatments causes significant structural reorganization, substantially affecting the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity and stability of nitrogen-doped graphitic systems. Amid contrasting reports describing the ORR activity of GN-based catalysts in alkaline electrolytes, we demonstrate superior activity in an acidic electrolyte with an onset potential of ~0.9 V, a half-wave potential (E½) of 0.71 V, and a selectivity for four-electron reduction of >95%. Further, durability testing showed E½ retention >95% in N2- and O2-saturated solutions after 2000 cycles, demonstrating the highest ORR activity and stability reported to date for GN-based electrocatalysts in acidic media.


ACS Nano | 2015

Direct imaging of charge transport in progressively reduced graphene oxide using electrostatic force microscopy.

Sibel Ebru Yalcin; Charudatta Galande; Rajesh Kappera; Hisato Yamaguchi; Ulises Martinez; Kirill A. Velizhanin; Stephen K. Doorn; Andrew M. Dattelbaum; Manish Chhowalla; Pulickel M. Ajayan; Gautam Gupta; Aditya D. Mohite

Graphene oxide (GO) has emerged as a multifunctional material that can be synthesized in bulk quantities and can be solution processed to form large-area atomic layered photoactive, flexible thin films for optoelectronic devices. This is largely due to the potential ability to tune electrical and optical properties of GO using functional groups. For the successful application of GO, it is key to understand the evolution of its optoelectronic properties as the GO undergoes a phase transition from its insulating and optically active state to the electrically conducting state with progressive reduction. In this paper, we use a combination of electrostatic force microscopy (EFM) and optical spectroscopy to monitor the emergence of the optoelectronic properties of GO with progressive reduction. EFM measurements enable, for the first time, direct visualization of charge propagation along the conducting pathways that emerge on progressively reduced graphene oxide (rGO) and demonstrate that with the increasing degree of reduction, injected charges can rapidly migrate over a distance of several micrometers, irrespective of their polarities. Direct imaging reveals the presence of an insurmountable potential barrier between reduced GO (rGO) and GO, which plays the decisive role in the charge transport. We complement charge imaging with theoretical modeling using quantum chemistry calculations that further demonstrate that the role of barrier in regulating the charge transport. Furthermore, by correlating the EFM measurements with photoluminescence imaging and electrical conductivity studies, we identify a bifunctional state in GO, where the optical properties are preserved along with good electrical conductivity, providing design principles for the development of GO-based, low-cost, thin-film optoelectronic applications.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2012

Morphology and porosity of nanoporous Au thin films formed by dealloying of AuxSi1−x

Gautam Gupta; J. C. Thorp; Nathan A. Mara; Andrew M. Dattelbaum; A. Misra; S. T. Picraux

We have investigated the morphology, structure, and annealing response of nanoporous Au films synthesized via electrochemical dealloying of amorphous AuxSi1−x co-deposited films on Si substrates. The starting Au alloy film concentrations were varied from x = 0.09 to 0.41 and the resulting nanoscale porous films were characterized by electron microscopy and Rutherford backscattering techniques. Our observations provide a systematic description of the nanoporous Au film morphology, porosity, and degree of collapse as a function of starting AuxSi1−x alloy composition. The characteristic pore sizes increased from 10 to 45 nm and the porosity increased from 45% to 70% for the nanoporous Au films with decrease in the starting Au concentrations. The degree of film collapse due to dealloying also increased with decreasing Au concentration. The electrochemical dealloying process for nanoporous film formation was observed to change from a layer-by-layer dealloying process to a localized, percolation-dominated proce...


ACS Nano | 2013

Stable and Fluid Multilayer Phospholipid–Silica Thin Films: Mimicking Active Multi-lamellar Biological Assemblies

Gautam Gupta; Srinivas Iyer; Kara Leasure; Nicole Virdone; Andrew M. Dattelbaum; Plamen Atanassov; Gabriel P. Lopez

Phospholipid-based nanomaterials are of interest in several applications including drug delivery, sensing, energy harvesting, and as model systems in basic research. However, a general challenge in creating functional hybrid biomaterials from phospholipid assemblies is their fragility, instability in air, insolubility in water, and the difficulty of integrating them into useful composites that retain or enhance the properties of interest, therefore limiting there use in integrated devices. We document the synthesis and characterization of highly ordered and stable phospholipid-silica thin films that resemble multilamellar architectures present in nature such as the myelin sheath. We have used a near room temperature chemical vapor deposition method to synthesize these robust functional materials. Highly ordered lipid films are exposed to vapors of silica precursor resulting in the formation of nanostructured hybrid assemblies. This process is simple, scalable, and offers advantages such as exclusion of ethanol and no (or minimal) need for exposure to mineral acids, which are generally required in conventional sol-gel synthesis strategies. The structure of the phospholipid-silica assemblies can be tuned to either lamellar or hexagonal organization depending on the synthesis conditions. The phospholipid-silica films exhibit long-term structural stability in air as well as when placed in aqueous solutions and maintain their fluidity under aqueous or humid conditions. This platform provides a model for robust implementation of phospholipid multilayers and a means toward future applications of functional phospholipid supramolecular assemblies in device integration.


Chemical Communications | 2004

Enhanced photoluminescence from poly(phenylene vinylene)∶ dendrimer polyelectrolyte assemblies in solution

Gabriel A. Montaño; Andrew M. Dattelbaum; Hsing-Lin Wang; Andrew P. Shreve

Poly(2,5-methoxy-propyloxy sulfonate phenylene vinylene)(MPS-PPV) and DAB-Am-16, a generation 3.0 polypropylenimine hexadecamine dendrimer (DAB), are shown to form a tunable photoresponsive polyelectrolyte assembly in aqueous solution with an enhanced emission signal of up to 18-times that of MPS-PPV alone.

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Gautam Gupta

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Aditya D. Mohite

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Stephen K. Doorn

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Geraldine M Purdy

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Han Htoon

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Andrew P. Shreve

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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