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Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Real time characterization of polymer surface modifications by an atmospheric-pressure plasma jet: Electrically coupled versus remote mode

Andrew J. Knoll; Pingshan Luan; Connor Hart; Yevgeny Raitses; G. S. Oehrlein

We characterize and distinguish two regimes of atmospheric pressure plasma (APP) polymer interactions depending on whether the electrical interaction of the plasma plume with the surface is significant (coupled) or not (remote). When the plasma is coupled to the surface, localized energy deposition by charged species in filaments dominates the interactions with the surface and produces contained damaged areas with high etch rates that decrease rapidly with plasma source-to-sample distance. For remote APP surface treatments, when only reactive neutral species interact with the surface, we established specific surface-chemical changes and very slow etching of polymer films. Remote treatments appear uniform with etch rates that are highly sensitive to feed gas chemistry and APP source temperature.


Biointerphases | 2015

Polystyrene as a model system to probe the impact of ambient gas chemistry on polymer surface modifications using remote atmospheric pressure plasma under well-controlled conditions

Pingshan Luan; Andrew J. Knoll; Connor Hart; Joonil Seog; G. S. Oehrlein

An atmospheric pressure plasma jet (APPJ) was used to treat polystyrene (PS) films under remote conditions where neither the plume nor visible afterglow interacts with the film surface. Carefully controlled conditions were achieved by mounting the APPJ inside a vacuum chamber interfaced to a UHV surface analysis system. PS was chosen as a model system as it contains neither oxygen nor nitrogen, has been extensively studied, and provides insight into how the aromatic structures widespread in biological systems are modified by atmospheric plasma. These remote treatments cause negligible etching and surface roughening, which is promising for treatment of sensitive materials. The surface chemistry was measured by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to evaluate how ambient chemistry, feed gas chemistry, and plasma-ambient interaction impact the formation of specific moieties. A variety of oxidized carbon species and low concentrations of NOx species were measured after APPJ treatment. In the remote conditions used in this work, modifications are not attributed to short-lived species, e.g., O atoms. It was found that O3 does not correlate with modifications, suggesting that other long-lived species such as singlet delta oxygen or NOx are important. Indeed, surface-bound NO3 was observed after treatment, which must originate from gas phase NOx as neither N nor O are found in the pristine film. By varying the ambient and feed gas chemistry to produce O-rich and O-poor conditions, a possible correlation between the oxygen and nitrogen composition was established. When oxygen is present in the feed gas or ambient, high levels of oxidation with low concentrations of NO3 on the surface were observed. For O-poor conditions, NO and NO2 were measured, suggesting that these species contribute to the oxidation process, but are easily oxidized when oxygen is present. That is, surface oxidation limits and competes with surface nitridation. Overall, surface oxidation takes place easily, but nitridation only occurs under specific conditions with the overall nitrogen content never exceeding 3%. Possible mechanisms for these processes are discussed. This work demonstrates the need to control plasma-ambient interactions and indicates a potential to take advantage of plasma-ambient interactions to fine-tune the reactive species output of APP sources, which is required for specialized applications, including polymer surface modifications and plasma medicine.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Spin-based characterization of material properties of diamond samples for high-sensitivity NV magnetometry

Diana Prado Lopes Aude Craik; Andrew Greenspon; Jennifer Schloss; Connor Hart; Erik Bauch; Pauli Kehayias; Xingyu Zhang; Patrick Scheidegger; Matthew Turner; Evelyn L. Hu; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

High-sensitivity wide-field magnetic field imaging using NV-diamond

Connor Hart; Patrick Scheidegger; Erik Bauch; Jennifer Schloss; Matthew Turner; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

A Ramsey-based wide-field magnetic imager using NV-diamond

Patrick Scheidegger; Connor Hart; Erik Bauch; Jennifer Schloss; Matthew Turner; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Optimization of NV-Diamond Material Properties for High Sensitivity Magnetometry

Jennifer Schloss; Diana Prado Lopes Aude Craik; Andrew Greenspon; Xingyu Zhang; Erik Bauch; Connor Hart; Matthew Turner; Patrick Scheidegger; Evelyn L. Hu; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Order of Magnitude Improvement in NV Ensemble T2* via Control and Cancellation of Spin Bath Induced Dephasing

Connor Hart; Erik Bauch; Jennifer Schloss; Matthew Turner; John Barry; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Improvement in T2* via Cancellation of Spin Bath Induced Dephasing in Solid-State Spins

Erik Bauch; Connor Hart; Jennifer Schloss; Matthew Turner; John Barry; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

An NV-Diamond Magnetic Imager for Neuroscience

Matthew Turner; Jennifer Schloss; Erik Bauch; Connor Hart; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Characterization and initialization of molecular defects in diamond as a testbed for single-molecule NMR

Emma Rosenfeld; Dominik Bucher; Linh Pham; Junghyun Lee; Erik Bauch; Connor Hart; Francesco Casola; Ronald L. Walsworth

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Erik Bauch

University of California

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