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Dive into the research topics where Carol J. Hirschmugl is active.

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Featured researches published by Carol J. Hirschmugl.


Nature Methods | 2011

High-resolution Fourier-transform infrared chemical imaging with multiple synchrotron beams

Michael J. Nasse; Michael J. Walsh; Eric C Mattson; Ruben Reininger; Andre Kajdacsy-Balla; Virgilia Macias; Rohit Bhargava; Carol J. Hirschmugl

Conventional Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) microspectroscopic systems are limited by an inevitable trade-off between spatial resolution, acquisition time, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and sample coverage. We present an FTIR imaging approach that substantially extends current capabilities by combining multiple synchrotron beams with wide-field detection. This advance allows truly diffraction-limited high-resolution imaging over the entire mid-infrared spectrum with high chemical sensitivity and fast acquisition speed while maintaining high-quality SNR.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2013

Indium-doped SnO2 nanoparticle–graphene nanohybrids: simple one-pot synthesis and their selective detection of NO2

Shumao Cui; Zhenhai Wen; Eric C. Mattson; Shun Mao; Jingbo Chang; M. Weinert; Carol J. Hirschmugl; M. Gajdardziska-Josifovska; Junhong Chen

We demonstrate novel nanohybrids of indium- and ruthenium-doped SnO2 nanoparticles (NPs) on a reduced graphene oxide (RGO) surface prepared using a simple one-pot method at a relatively low temperature. The size of the doped SnO2 NPs on the RGO is as small as 2–3 nm with uniform distribution. We find that the introduction of dopants facilitates the NP nucleation on graphene oxide. The gas sensing responses of the resulting nanohybrids demonstrate that the addition of indium in SnO2 significantly enhances the sensitivity to NO2 compared with RGO–SnO2. The sensor also shows excellent selectivity to NO2 when other common gases such as NH3, H2, CO and H2S, are present. The sensing mechanism responsible for the superior sensitivity and selectivity of the nanohybrids is also discussed.


ACS Nano | 2011

Evidence of nanocrystalline semiconducting graphene monoxide during thermal reduction of graphene oxide in vacuum.

Eric C. Mattson; Haihui Pu; Shumao Cui; Marvin A. Schofield; S. H. Rhim; Ganhua Lu; Michael J. Nasse; Rodney S. Ruoff; M. Weinert; M. Gajdardziska-Josifovska; Junhong Chen; Carol J. Hirschmugl

As silicon-based electronics are reaching the nanosize limits of the semiconductor roadmap, carbon-based nanoelectronics has become a rapidly growing field, with great interest in tuning the properties of carbon-based materials. Chemical functionalization is a proposed route, but syntheses of graphene oxide (G-O) produce disordered, nonstoichiometric materials with poor electronic properties. We report synthesis of an ordered, stoichiometric, solid-state carbon oxide that has never been observed in nature and coexists with graphene. Formation of this material, graphene monoxide (GMO), is achieved by annealing multilayered G-O. Our results indicate that the resulting thermally reduced G-O (TRG-O) consists of a two-dimensional nanocrystalline phase segregation: unoxidized graphitic regions are separated from highly oxidized regions of GMO. GMO has a quasi-hexagonal unit cell, an unusually high 1:1 O:C ratio, and a calculated direct band gap of ∼0.9 eV.


Applied Spectroscopy | 2012

Fourier transform infrared spectrochemical imaging: review of design and applications with a focal plane array and multiple beam synchrotron radiation source.

Carol J. Hirschmugl; Kathleen M. Gough

The beamline design, microscope specifications, and initial results from the new mid-infrared beamline (IRENI) are reviewed. Synchrotron-based spectrochemical imaging, as recently implemented at the Synchrotron Radiation Center in Stoughton, Wisconsin, demonstrates the new capability to achieve diffraction limited chemical imaging across the entire mid-infrared region, simultaneously, with high signal-to-noise ratio. IRENI extracts a large swath of radiation (320 hor. × 25 vert. mrads 2 ) to homogeneously illuminate a commercial infrared (IR) microscope equipped with an IR focal plane array (FPA) detector. Wide-field images are collected, in contrast to single-pixel imaging from the confocal geometry with raster scanning, commonly used at most synchrotron beamlines. IRENI rapidly generates high quality, high spatial resolution data. The relevant advantages (spatial oversampling, speed, sensitivity, and signal-to-noise ratio) are discussed in detail and demonstrated with examples from a variety of disciplines, including formalin-fixed and flash-frozen tissue samples, live cells, fixed cells, paint cross-sections, polymer fibers, and novel nanomaterials. The impact of Mie scattering corrections on this high quality data is shown, and first results with a grazing angle objective are presented, along with future enhancements and plans for implementation of similar, small-scale instruments.


NeuroImage | 2012

Biochemical label-free tissue imaging with subcellular-resolution synchrotron FTIR with focal plane array detector.

M. Z. Kastyak-Ibrahim; M. J. Nasse; M. Rak; Carol J. Hirschmugl; M. R. Del Bigio; Benedict C. Albensi; Kathleen M. Gough

The critical questions into the cause of neural degeneration, in Alzheimer disease and other neurodegenerative disorders, are closely related to the question of why certain neurons survive. Answers require detailed understanding of biochemical changes in single cells. Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopy is an excellent tool for biomolecular imaging in situ, but resolution is limited. The mid-infrared beamline IRENI (InfraRed ENvironmental Imaging) at the Synchrotron Radiation Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, enables label-free subcellular imaging and biochemical analysis of neurons with an increase of two orders of magnitude in pixel spacing over current systems. With IRENIs capabilities, it is now possible to study changes in individual neurons in situ, and to characterize their surroundings, using only the biochemical signatures of naturally-occurring components in unstained, unfixed tissue. We present examples of analyses of brain from two transgenic mouse models of Alzheimer disease (TgCRND8 and 3xTg) that exhibit different features of pathogenesis. Data processing on spectral features for nuclei reveals individual hippocampal neurons, and neurons located in the proximity of amyloid plaque in TgCRND8 mouse. Elevated lipids are detected surrounding and, for the first time, within the dense core of amyloid plaques, offering support for inflammatory and aggregation roles. Analysis of saturated and unsaturated fatty acid ester content in retina allows characterization of neuronal layers. IRENI images also reveal spatially-resolved data with unprecedented clarity and distinct spectral variation, from sub-regions including photoreceptors, neuronal cell bodies and synapses in sections of mouse retina. Biochemical composition of retinal layers can be used to study changes related to disease processes and dietary modification.


Nature Methods | 2013

3D spectral imaging with synchrotron Fourier transform infrared spectro-microtomography

Michael C. Martin; Charlotte Dabat-Blondeau; Miriam Unger; Julia Sedlmair; Dilworth Y. Parkinson; Hans A. Bechtel; Barbara L. Illman; Jonathan M. Castro; Marco Keiluweit; David G. Buschke; Brenda M. Ogle; Michael J. Nasse; Carol J. Hirschmugl

We report Fourier transform infrared spectro-microtomography, a nondestructive three-dimensional imaging approach that reveals the distribution of distinctive chemical compositions throughout an intact biological or materials sample. The method combines mid-infrared absorption contrast with computed tomographic data acquisition and reconstruction to enhance chemical and morphological localization by determining a complete infrared spectrum for every voxel (millions of spectra determined per sample).


Surface Science | 2002

Frontiers in infrared spectroscopy at surfaces and interfaces

Carol J. Hirschmugl

An overview of advances in infrared (IR) spectroscopy is presented. Recent results in several areas of topical interest, including examples in biocompatibility, dielectric films, in situ chemical reactions, and electron relaxation in nanoparticles, are highlighted. Major advances in IR experimental methods include the development of accelerator-based sources of IR light and the application of novel techniques to examine complex systems. These advances, and their role in elucidating crucial insights about surfaces and interfaces, are illustrated by recent work in the literature. After reviewing the current state of the art, promising future directions are discussed. In particular, superb opportunities are expected to develop in a broad range of scientific disciplines, e.g., biology, device engineering, chemistry, and physics.


Analyst | 2013

Detection of an estrogen derivative in two breast cancer cell lines using a single core multimodal probe for imaging (SCoMPI) imaged by a panel of luminescent and vibrational techniques

Sylvain Clède; François Lambert; Christophe Sandt; Slávka Kaščáková; Miriam Unger; Etienne Harté; Marie-Aude Plamont; Rénette Saint-Fort; Ariane Deniset-Besseau; Zoher Gueroui; Carol J. Hirschmugl; Sophie Lecomte; Alexandre Dazzi; Anne Vessières; Clotilde Policar

3-Methoxy-17α-ethynylestradiol or mestranol is a prodrug for ethynylestradiol and the estrogen component of some oral contraceptive formulations. We demonstrate here that a single core multimodal probe for imaging - SCoMPI - can be efficiently grafted onto mestranol allowing its tracking in two breast cancer cell lines, MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 fixed cells. Correlative imaging studies based on luminescence (synchrotron UV spectromicroscopy, wide field and confocal fluorescence microscopies) and vibrational (AFMIR, synchrotron FTIR spectromicroscopy, synchrotron-based multiple beam FTIR imaging, confocal Raman microspectroscopy) spectroscopies were consistent with one another and showed a Golgi apparatus distribution of the SCoMPI-mestranol conjugate in both cell lines.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

Ultrasensitive Chemical Sensing through Facile Tuning Defects and Functional Groups in Reduced Graphene Oxide

Shumao Cui; Haihui Pu; Eric C. Mattson; Zhenhai Wen; Jingbo Chang; Yang Hou; Carol J. Hirschmugl; Junhong Chen

Herein, we report on a facile, low-cost, and efficient method to tune the structure and properties of chemically reduced graphene oxide (rGO) by applying a transient voltage across the rGO for ultrasensitive gas sensors. A large number of defects, including pits, are formed in the rGO upon the voltage activation. More interestingly, the number of epoxide and ether functional groups in the rGO increased after the voltage activation. The voltage-activated rGO was highly sensitive to NO2 with a sensitivity 500% higher than that of the original rGO. The lower detection limit can reach an unprecedented ultralow concentration of 50 ppb for NO2 sensing. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations revealed that the high sensitivity to NO2 is attributed to the efficient charge transfer from ether groups to NO2, which is the dominant sensing mechanism. This study points to a promising method to tune the properties of graphene-based materials through the creation of additional defects and functional groups for high-performance gas sensors.


Applied Spectroscopy | 2009

Demountable Liquid/Flow Cell for in vivo Infrared Microspectroscopy of Biological Specimens:

M. J. Nasse; S. Ratti; M. Giordano; Carol J. Hirschmugl

We have developed a liquid/flow cell/chamber allowing infrared measurements of living biological specimens with high spatial resolution under a controlled aqueous environment. This flow chamber features sub-micrometer thick diamond windows exhibiting low spherical and chromatic aberrations. Diamond has excellent transmission properties and minimal dispersion over the entire mid-infrared and visible spectral ranges. In contrast to current commercially available infrared liquid chambers, the flow chamber has a slim profile, which accommodates high resolution/magnification microscope objectives with small working distances, down to 0.6 mm above the chamber and 6 mm below the flow chamber. We have coupled a pump to the flow chamber to provide medium exchange. As an example, we present microspectroscopic infrared maps and spectra of the freshwater green alga Micrasterias sp. in the new flow chamber and compare them to maps obtained with a conventional liquid chamber. Pulse-amplitude-modulated fluorescence measurements on Micrasterias sp. cells inside the new flow chamber have been evaluated to demonstrate the viability of the algal cells.

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Eric C. Mattson

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Junhong Chen

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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M. Gajdardziska-Josifovska

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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M. Weinert

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Haihui Pu

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Shumao Cui

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Ebrahim Aboualizadeh

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Miriam Unger

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Ganhua Lu

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Julia Sedlmair

United States Department of Agriculture

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