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Dive into the research topics where Brian M. Foley is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian M. Foley.


Nano Letters | 2001

Identification of electron donor states in N-doped carbon nanotubes

Richard Czerw; Mauricio Terrones; Jean-Christophe Charlier; Xavier Blase; Brian M. Foley; R. Kamalakaran; Nicole Grobert; H. Terrones; D Tekleab; Pulickel M. Ajayan; Werner J. Blau; M. Rühle; David L. Carroll

Nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes have been synthesized using pyrolysis and characterized by scanning tunneling spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The doped nanotubes are all metallic and exhibit strong electron donor states near the Fermi level. Using tight-binding and ab initio calculations, we observe that pyridine-like N structures are responsible for the metallic behavior and the prominent features near the Fermi level. These electron rich structures are the first example of n-type nanotubes, which could pave the way to real molecular heterojunction devices.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Interaction of endosialin/TEM1 with extracellular matrix proteins mediates cell adhesion and migration

Brian E. Tomkowicz; Katherine Rybinski; Brian M. Foley; Wolfgang Ebel; Brad Kline; Eric Routhier; Philip M. Sass; Nicholas C. Nicolaides; Luigi Grasso; Yuhong Zhou

Endosialin/TEM1 was originally discovered as a human embryonic fibroblast-specific antigen and was later found to be differentially expressed in tumor stroma and endothelium. Endosialin/TEM1 overexpression has been observed in many cancers of various tissue origin, including colon, breast, pancreatic, and lung. The knockout (KO) mouse model showed the absence of endosialin/TEM1 expression reduced growth, invasion, and metastasis of human tumor xenografts. In addition, lack of endosialin/TEM1 led to an increase in small immature blood vessels and decreased numbers of medium and large tumor vessels. This abnormal angiogenic response could be responsible for the reduced tumor growth and invasion observed in endosialin/TEM1 KO mice, suggesting a role for endosialin/TEM1 in controlling the interaction among tumor cells, endothelia, and stromal matrix. Here we report the identification of fibronectin (FN) and collagen types I and IV as specific ligands for endosialin/TEM1. More importantly, cells expressing endosialin/TEM1 exhibit enhanced adhesion to FN as well as enhanced migration through matrigel, although these properties could be blocked by a humanized antibody directed against human endosialin/TEM1. Our results pinpoint to a molecular mechanism by which expression of endosialin/TEM1 in the tumor stroma and endothelium may support tumor progression and invasion.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Thermal conductivity of nano-grained SrTiO3 thin films

Brian M. Foley; Harlan James Brown-Shaklee; John C. Duda; Ramez Cheaito; Brady J. Gibbons; Doug Medlin; Jon F. Ihlefeld; Patrick E. Hopkins

We measure the thermal conductivities of nano-grained strontium titanate (ng-SrTiO3) films deposited on sapphire substrates via time-domain thermoreflectance. The 170 nm thick oxide films of varying grain-size were prepared from a chemical solution deposition process. We find that the thermal conductivity of ng-SrTiO3 decreases with decreasing average grain size and attribute this to increased phonon scattering at grain boundaries. Our data are well described by a model that accounts for the spectral nature of anharmonic Umklapp scattering along with grain boundary scattering and scattering due to the film thickness.


Nano Letters | 2015

Room-temperature voltage tunable phonon thermal conductivity via reconfigurable interfaces in ferroelectric thin films.

Jon F. Ihlefeld; Brian M. Foley; David Scrymgeour; Joseph R. Michael; Bonnie Beth McKenzie; Douglas L. Medlin; Margeaux Wallace; Susan Trolier-McKinstry; Patrick E. Hopkins

Dynamic control of thermal transport in solid-state systems is a transformative capability with the promise to propel technologies including phononic logic, thermal management, and energy harvesting. A solid-state solution to rapidly manipulate phonons has escaped the scientific community. We demonstrate active and reversible tuning of thermal conductivity by manipulating the nanoscale ferroelastic domain structure of a Pb(Zr0.3Ti0.7)O3 film with applied electric fields. With subsecond response times, the room-temperature thermal conductivity was modulated by 11%.


Nano Letters | 2015

Modifying Surface Energy of Graphene via Plasma-Based Chemical Functionalization to Tune Thermal and Electrical Transport at Metal Interfaces

Brian M. Foley; Sandra C. Hernández; John C. Duda; Jeremy T. Robinson; Scott G. Walton; Patrick E. Hopkins

The high mobility exhibited by both supported and suspended graphene, as well as its large in-plane thermal conductivity, has generated much excitement across a variety of applications. As exciting as these properties are, one of the principal issues inhibiting the development of graphene technologies pertains to difficulties in engineering high-quality metal contacts on graphene. As device dimensions decrease, the thermal and electrical resistance at the metal/graphene interface plays a dominant role in degrading overall performance. Here we demonstrate the use of a low energy, electron-beam plasma to functionalize graphene with oxygen, fluorine, and nitrogen groups, as a method to tune the thermal and electrical transport properties across gold-single layer graphene (Au/SLG) interfaces. We find that while oxygen and nitrogen groups improve the thermal boundary conductance (hK) at the interface, their presence impairs electrical transport leading to increased contact resistance (ρC). Conversely, functionalization with fluorine has no impact on hK, yet ρC decreases with increasing coverage densities. These findings indicate exciting possibilities using plasma-based chemical functionalization to tailor the thermal and electrical transport properties of metal/2D material contacts.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Protein Thermal Conductivity Measured in the Solid State Reveals Anharmonic Interactions of Vibrations in a Fractal Structure

Brian M. Foley; Caroline S. Gorham; John C. Duda; Ramez Cheaito; Chester J. Szwejkowski; Costel Constantin; Bryan Kaehr; Patrick E. Hopkins

Energy processes and vibrations in biological macromolecules such as proteins ultimately dictate biological, chemical, and physical functions in living materials. These energetic vibrations in the ribbon-like motifs of proteins interact on self-similar structures and fractal-like objects over a range of length scales of the protein (a few angstroms to the size of the protein itself, a few nanometers). In fact, the fractal geometries of protein molecules create a complex network of vibrations; therefore, proteins represent an ideal material system to study the underlying mechanisms driving vibrational thermal transport in a dense, fractal network. However, experimental studies of thermal energy transport in proteins have been limited to dispersive protein suspensions, which limits the knowledge that can be extracted about how vibrational energy is transferred in a pure protein solid. We overcome this by synthesizing solid, water-insoluble protein films for thermal conductivity measurements via time-domain thermoreflectance. We measure the thermal conductivity of bovine serum albumin and myoglobin solid films over a range of temperatures from 77 to 296 K. These temperature trends indicate that anharmonic coupling of vibrations in the protein is contributing to thermal conductivity. This first-ever observation of anharmonic-like trends in the thermal conductivity of a fully dense protein forms the basis of validation of seminal theories of vibrational energy-transfer processes in fractal objects.


Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals | 2002

Doping and connecting carbon nanotubes

Mauricio Terrones; Humberto Terrones; Pulickel M. Ajayan; F. Banhart; Xavier Blase; David L. Carroll; Richard Czerw; Brian M. Foley; Jean-Christophe Charlier; R. Kamalakaran; Philipp Kohler-Redlich; M. Rühle; T. Seeger; Nicole Grobert

Self-assembly pyrolytic routes to arrays of aligned CN x nanotubes are described. The electronic properties and the density of states (DOS) of these N doped tubes characterized by scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) are also presented. Using tight-binding calculations, we confirm that the presence of N is responsible for introducing donor states near the Fermi Level. Finally, it will be shown that high electron irradiation during annealing at 700-800°C, is capable of coalescing single-walled nanotubes (SWNTs). We investigate the merge at the atomic level using tight-binding molecular dynamics (TBMD). Vacancies induce the coalescence via a zipper-like mechanism, responsible of a continuous reorganization of atoms on individual tube lattices within the adjacent tubes. The latter results pave the way to the fabrication of nanotube contacts, nanocircuits and strong 3D composites using irradiation doses under annealing conditions.


loughborough antennas and propagation conference | 2010

Application and analysis of MIMO systems using Metropolis algorithm

A. Grennan; Conor Downing; Brian M. Foley

A ray-tracing model was used to investigate the spectral efficiency of multiple input, multiple output (MIMO) antenna array systems in a rectangular space representing a typical short-range indoor environment. Results are presented from simulations in which the positions of the individual array elements were adjusted to improve the system capacity. These adjustments were done iteratively based on the Metropolis algorithm. The relationship between the capacity improvements and factors affecting this was investigated.


Nanotechnology | 2018

Titanium contacts to graphene: process-induced variability in electronic and thermal transport

Keren M. Freedy; Ashutosh Giri; Brian M. Foley; Matthew R. Barone; Patrick E. Hopkins; Stephen McDonnell

Contact resistance (R C) is a major limiting factor in the performance of graphene devices. R C is sensitive to the quality of the interface and the composition of the contact, which are affected by the graphene transfer process and contact deposition conditions. In this work, a linear correlation is observed between the composition of Ti contacts, characterized by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and the Ti/graphene contact resistance measured by the transfer length method. We find that contact composition is tunable via deposition rate and base pressure. Reactor base pressure is found to effect the resultant contact resistance. The effect of contact deposition conditions on thermal transport measured by time-domain thermoreflectance is also reported. Interfaces with higher oxide composition appear to result in a lower thermal boundary conductance. Possible origins of this thermal boundary conductance change with oxide composition are discussed.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Probing Growth-Induced Anisotropic Thermal Transport in High-Quality CVD Diamond Membranes by Multifrequency and Multiple-Spot-Size Time-Domain Thermoreflectance

Zhe Cheng; Thomas L. Bougher; Tingyu Bai; Steven Y. Wang; Chao Li; Luke Yates; Brian M. Foley; Mark S. Goorsky; Baratunde A. Cola; Firooz Faili; Samuel Graham

The maximum output power of GaN-based high-electron mobility transistors is limited by high channel temperature induced by localized self-heating, which degrades device performance and reliability. Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond is an attractive candidate to aid in the extraction of this heat and in minimizing the peak operating temperatures of high-power electronics. Owing to its inhomogeneous structure, the thermal conductivity of CVD diamond varies along the growth direction and can differ between the in-plane and out-of-plane directions, resulting in a complex three-dimensional (3D) distribution. Depending on the thickness of the diamond and size of the electronic device, this 3D distribution may impact the effectiveness of CVD diamond in device thermal management. In this work, time-domain thermoreflectance is used to measure the anisotropic thermal conductivity of an 11.8 μm-thick high-quality CVD diamond membrane from its nucleation side. Starting with a spot-size diameter larger than the thickness of the membrane, measurements are made at various modulation frequencies from 1.2 to 11.6 MHz to tune the heat penetration depth and sample the variation in thermal conductivity. We then analyze the data by creating a model with the membrane divided into ten sublayers and assume isotropic thermal conductivity in each sublayer. From this, we observe a two-dimensional gradient of the depth-dependent thermal conductivity for this membrane. The local thermal conductivity goes beyond 1000 W/(m K) when the distance from the nucleation interface only reaches 3 μm. Additionally, by measuring the same region with a smaller spot size at multiple frequencies, the in-plane and cross-plane thermal conductivities are extracted. Through this use of multiple spot sizes and modulation frequencies, the 3D anisotropic thermal conductivity of CVD diamond membrane is experimentally obtained by fitting the experimental data to a thermal model. This work provides an improved understanding of thermal conductivity inhomogeneity in high-quality CVD polycrystalline diamond that is important for applications in the thermal management of high-power electronics.

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Jon F. Ihlefeld

Sandia National Laboratories

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Mauricio Terrones

Pennsylvania State University

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