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Dive into the research topics where David C. Bell is active.

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Featured researches published by David C. Bell.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2009

Single crystalline kinked semiconductor nanowire superstructures

Bozhi Tian; Ping Xie; Thomas J. Kempa; David C. Bell; Charles M. Lieber

The ability to control and modulate the composition1–4, doping1,3–5, crystal structure6–8 and morphology9,10 of semiconductor nanowires during the synthesis process has allowed researchers to explore various applications of nanowires11–15. However, despite advances in nanowire synthesis, progress towards the ab initio design and growth of hierarchical nanostructures has been limited. Here we demonstrate a ‘nanotectonic’ approach that provides iterative control over the nucleation and growth of nanowires and use it to grow kinked or zigzag nanowires in which the straight sections are separated by triangular joints. Moreover, the lengths of the straight sections can be controlled and the growth direction remains coherent along the nanowire. We also grow dopant-modulated structures in which specific device functions, including p-n diodes and field-effect transistors, can be precisely localized at the kinked junctions in the nanowires.


Nanotechnology | 2009

Precision Cutting and Patterning of Graphene with Helium Ions

David C. Bell; Max C. Lemme; Lewis Stern; James R. Williams; C. M. Marcus

We report nanoscale patterning of graphene using a helium ion microscope configured for lithography. Helium ion lithography is a direct-write lithography process, comparable to conventional focused ion beam patterning, with no resist or other material contacting the sample surface. In the present application, graphene samples on Si/SiO2 substrates are cut using helium ions, with computer controlled alignment, patterning, and exposure. Once suitable beam doses are determined, sharp edge profiles and clean etching are obtained, with little evident damage or doping to the sample. This technique provides fast lithography compatible with graphene, with approximately 15 nm feature sizes.


ACS Nano | 2009

Etching of Graphene Devices with a Helium Ion Beam

Max C. Lemme; David C. Bell; James R. Williams; Lewis Stern; Britton W. H. Baugher; Pablo Jarillo-Herrero; C. M. Marcus

We report on the etching of graphene devices with a helium ion beam, including in situ electrical measurement during lithography. The etching process can be used to nanostructure and electrically isolate different regions in a graphene device, as demonstrated by etching a channel in a suspended graphene device with etched gaps down to about 10 nm. Graphene devices on silicon dioxide (SiO(2)) substrates etch with lower He ion doses and are found to have a residual conductivity after etching, which we attribute to contamination by hydrocarbons.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Coaxial multishell nanowires with high-quality electronic interfaces and tunable optical cavities for ultrathin photovoltaics

Thomas J. Kempa; James F. Cahoon; Sun Kyung Kim; Robert W. Day; David C. Bell; Hong Gyu Park; Charles M. Lieber

Silicon nanowires (NWs) could enable low-cost and efficient photovoltaics, though their performance has been limited by nonideal electrical characteristics and an inability to tune absorption properties. We overcome these limitations through controlled synthesis of a series of polymorphic core/multishell NWs with highly crystalline, hexagonally-faceted shells, and well-defined coaxial (p/n) and p/intrinsic/n (p/i/n) diode junctions. Designed 200–300 nm diameter p/i/n NW diodes exhibit ultralow leakage currents of approximately 1 fA, and open-circuit voltages and fill-factors up to 0.5 V and 73%, respectively, under one-sun illumination. Single-NW wavelength-dependent photocurrent measurements reveal size-tunable optical resonances, external quantum efficiencies greater than unity, and current densities double those for silicon films of comparable thickness. In addition, finite-difference-time-domain simulations for the measured NW structures agree quantitatively with the photocurrent measurements, and demonstrate that the optical resonances are due to Fabry-Perot and whispering-gallery cavity modes supported in the high-quality faceted nanostructures. Synthetically optimized NW devices achieve current densities of 17 mA/cm2 and power-conversion efficiencies of 6%. Horizontal integration of multiple NWs demonstrates linear scaling of the absolute photocurrent with number of NWs, as well as retention of the high open-circuit voltages and short-circuit current densities measured for single NW devices. Notably, assembly of 2 NW elements into vertical stacks yields short-circuit current densities of 25 mA/cm2 with a backside reflector, and simulations further show that such stacking represents an attractive approach for further enhancing performance with projected efficiencies of > 15% for 1.2 μm thick 5 NW stacks.


ACS Nano | 2013

Slow DNA Transport through Nanopores in Hafnium Oxide Membranes

Joseph Larkin; Robert Y. Henley; David C. Bell; Tzahi Cohen-Karni; Jacob K. Rosenstein; Meni Wanunu

We present a study of double- and single-stranded DNA transport through nanopores fabricated in ultrathin (2-7 nm thick) freestanding hafnium oxide (HfO2) membranes. The high chemical stability of ultrathin HfO2 enables long-lived experiments with <2 nm diameter pores that last several hours, in which we observe >50 000 DNA translocations with no detectable pore expansion. Mean DNA velocities are slower than velocities through comparable silicon nitride pores, providing evidence that HfO2 nanopores have favorable physicochemical interactions with nucleic acids that can be leveraged to slow down DNA in a nanopore.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2009

Contrast Mechanisms and Image Formation in Helium Ion Microscopy

David C. Bell

The helium ion microscope is a unique imaging instrument. Based on an atomic level imaging system using the principle of field ion microscopy, the helium ion source has been shown to be incredibly stable and reliable, itself a remarkable engineering feat. Here we show that the image contrast is fundamentally different to other microscopes such as the scanning electron microscope (SEM), although showing many operational similarities due to the physical ion interaction mechanisms with the sample. Secondary electron images show enhanced surface contrast due the small surface interaction volume as well as elemental contrast differences, such as for nanowires imaged on a substrate. We present images of nanowires and nanoparticles for comparison with SEM imaging. Applications of Rutherford backscattered ion imaging as a unique and novel imaging mechanism are described. The advantages of the contrast mechanisms offered by this instrument for imaging nanomaterials are clearly apparent due to the high resolution and surface sensitivity afforded in the images. Future developments of the helium ion microscope should yield yet further improvements in imaging and provide a platform for continued advances in microscope science and nanoscale research.


Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B | 2009

Scanning-helium-ion-beam lithography with hydrogen silsesquioxane resist

Donald Winston; Bryan M. Cord; B. Ming; David C. Bell; W. F. DiNatale; Lewis Stern; Andras Vladar; Michael T. Postek; Mark K. Mondol; Joel K. W. Yang; Karl K. Berggren

A scanning-helium-ion-beam microscope is now commercially available. This microscope can be used to perform lithography similar to, but of potentially higher resolution than, scanning electron-beam lithography. This article describes the control of this microscope for lithography via beam steering/blanking electronics and evaluates the high-resolution performance of scanning helium-ion-beam lithography. The authors found that sub-10nm-half-pitch patterning is feasible. They also measured a point-spread function that indicates a reduction in the micrometer-range proximity effect typical in electron-beam lithography.


Science Translational Medicine | 2012

Oxygen Gas–Filled Microparticles Provide Intravenous Oxygen Delivery

John N. Kheir; Laurie A. Scharp; Mark A. Borden; Edward J. Swanson; Andrew Loxley; James Reese; Katherine J. Black; Luis Velazquez; Lindsay M. Thomson; Brian K Walsh; Kathryn Mullen; Dionne A. Graham; Michael W. Lawlor; Carlo Brugnara; David C. Bell; Francis X. McGowan

A foam suspension containing oxygen gas–filled microparticles can deliver life-sustaining oxygen during a 15-min period of complete asphyxia. Oxygen on Demand The clinical sequelae after prolonged oxygen deprivation can be serious, including cardiac arrest and brain damage. In these situations, patients are typically fed oxygen through a tube via the mouth. What happens when access to the lungs is impeded or delayed? Currently, few other options exist. In response, Kheir and colleagues have engineered microparticles that can be injected into the veins for systemic delivery of oxygen to all of the vital organs. The lipidic oxygen–containing microparticles (LOMs) consist of a lipid shell and an oxygen gas (O2) core, with an approximate diameter of 4 μm. These tiny particles were designed to mix with venous blood and deliver O2 to oxygen-deprived hemoglobin—the molecule that carries oxygen to all tissues within the body. Kheir et al. first confirmed that the LOMs functioned as intended by mixing a foam suspension of the particles with human blood in tubes and measuring the rise in oxygenated hemoglobin. When administered intravenously to asphyxiated (and therefore hypoxemic) rabbits, the LOMs were able to maintain full-body oxygenation, normal blood pressure, and normal heart rate compared to control animals that only received a saline solution. The animals receiving LOMs also lived longer and did not experience any injury to major organs, such as liver and lungs. This is an encouraging demonstration for critical care medicine situations, showing that animals can survive and remain healthy even after 10 to 15 min of complete asphyxia. Such short-term infusions could therefore serve an important therapeutic function for critically ill patients, but before you hear “LOMs, stat!” in the emergency room, additional studies will be needed to assess simultaneous removal of carbon dioxide buildup, LOM metabolism, and possible side effects from longer-term, continuous infusions. We have developed an injectable foam suspension containing self-assembling, lipid-based microparticles encapsulating a core of pure oxygen gas for intravenous injection. Prototype suspensions were manufactured to contain between 50 and 90 ml of oxygen gas per deciliter of suspension. Particle size was polydisperse, with a mean particle diameter between 2 and 4 μm. When mixed with human blood ex vivo, oxygen transfer from 70 volume % microparticles was complete within 4 s. When the microparticles were infused by intravenous injection into hypoxemic rabbits, arterial saturations increased within seconds to near-normal levels; this was followed by a decrease in oxygen tensions after stopping the infusions. The particles were also infused into rabbits undergoing 15 min of complete tracheal occlusion. Oxygen microparticles significantly decreased the degree of hypoxemia in these rabbits, and the incidence of cardiac arrest and organ injury was reduced compared to controls. The ability to administer oxygen and other gases directly to the bloodstream may represent a technique for short-term rescue of profoundly hypoxemic patients, to selectively augment oxygen delivery to at-risk organs, or for novel diagnostic techniques. Furthermore, the ability to titrate gas infusions rapidly may minimize oxygen-related toxicity.


Nano Letters | 2012

Synthetically Encoded Ultrashort-Channel Nanowire Transistors for Fast, Pointlike Cellular Signal Detection

Tzahi Cohen-Karni; Didier Casanova; James F. Cahoon; Quan Qing; David C. Bell; Charles M. Lieber

Nanostructures, which have sizes comparable to biological functional units involved in cellular communication, offer the potential for enhanced sensitivity and spatial resolution compared to planar metal and semiconductor structures. Silicon nanowire (SiNW) field-effect transistors (FETs) have been used as a platform for biomolecular sensors, which maintain excellent signal-to-noise ratios while operating on lengths scales that enable efficient extra- and intracellular integration with living cells. Although the NWs are tens of nanometers in diameter, the active region of the NW FET devices typically spans micrometers, limiting both the length and time scales of detection achievable with these nanodevices. Here, we report a new synthetic method that combines gold-nanocluster-catalyzed vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) and vapor-solid-solid (VSS) NW growth modes to produce synthetically encoded NW devices with ultrasharp (<5 nm) n-type highly doped (n(++)) to lightly doped (n) transitions along the NW growth direction, where n(++) regions serve as source/drain (S/D) electrodes and the n-region functions as an active FET channel. Using this method, we synthesized short-channel n(++)/n/n(++) SiNW FET devices with independently controllable diameters and channel lengths. SiNW devices with channel lengths of 50, 80, and 150 nm interfaced with spontaneously beating cardiomyocytes exhibited well-defined extracellular field potential signals with signal-to-noise values of ca. 4 independent of device size. Significantly, these pointlike devices yield peak widths of ∼500 μs, which is comparable to the reported time constant for individual sodium ion channels. Multiple FET devices with device separations smaller than 2 μm were also encoded on single SiNWs, thus enabling multiplexed recording from single cells and cell networks with device-to-device time resolution on the order of a few microseconds. These short-channel SiNW FET devices provide a new opportunity to create nanoscale biomolecular sensors that operate on the length and time scales previously inaccessible by other techniques but necessary to investigate fundamental, subcellular biological processes.


Ultramicroscopy | 2012

40 keV atomic resolution TEM

David C. Bell; Christopher J. Russo; Dmitry V. Kolmykov

Here we present the first atomic resolution TEM imaging at 40 keV using an aberration-corrected, monochromated source TEM. Low-voltage High-Resolution Electron Microscopy (LVHREM) has several advantages, including increased cross-sections for inelastic and elastic scattering, increased contrast per electron and improved spectroscopy efficiency, decreased delocalization effects and reduced knock-on damage. Together, these often improve the contrast to damage ratio obtained on a large class of samples. Third-order aberration correction now allows us to operate the TEM at low energies while retaining atomic resolution, which was previously impossible. At low voltage the major limitation to resolution becomes the chromatic aberration limit. We show that using a source monochromator we are able to reduce the effect of chromatic aberration and achieve a usable high-resolution limit at 40 keV to less than 1Å. We show various materials examples of the application of the technique to image graphene and silicon, and compare atomic resolution images with electron multislice simulations.

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C. M. Marcus

University of Copenhagen

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Meni Wanunu

Northeastern University

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Christopher J. Russo

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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B J Inkson

University of Sheffield

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