Denver Linklater
Swinburne University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Denver Linklater.
Nanotechnology | 2017
Denver Linklater; Huu Khuong Duy Nguyen; Chris M. Bhadra; Saulius Juodkazis; Elena P. Ivanova
The nanostructuring of materials to create bactericidal and antibiofouling surfaces presents an exciting alternative to common methods of preventing bacterial adhesion. The fabrication of synthetic bactericidal surfaces has been inspired by the anti-wetting and anti-biofouling properties of insect wings, and other topologies found in nature. Black silicon is one such synthetic surfaces which has established bactericidal properties. In this study we show that time-dependent plasma etching of silicon wafers using 15, 30, and 45 min etching intervals, is able to produce different surface geometries with linearly increasing heights of approximately 280, 430, and 610 nm, respectively. After incubation on these surfaces with Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus and Gram-negative Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacterial cells it was established that smaller, more densely packed pillars exhibited the greatest bactericidal activity with 85% and 89% inactivation of bacterial cells, respectively. The decrease in the pillar heights, pillar cap diameter and inter-pillar spacing corresponded to a subsequent decrease in the number of attached cells for both bacterial species.
Interface Focus | 2018
Denver Linklater; Vladimir A. Baulin; Saulius Juodkazis; Elena P. Ivanova
Growing interest in the bactericidal effect of graphene and graphene-derived nanomaterials has led to the investigation and effective publication of the bactericidal effects of the substratum, many of which present highly conflicting material. The nature of bacterial cell death on graphene bio-interfaces, therefore, remains poorly understood. Here, we review recent findings on the bactericidal effect of graphene and graphene-derived nanomaterials, and proposed mechanisms of cell inactivation, due to mechanical contact with graphene materials, including lipid extraction, physical damage to membranes and pore formation.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Denver Linklater; Saulius Juodkazis; Sergey Rubanov; Elena P. Ivanova
The recent discovery of nanostructured surfaces induced rupturing of bacterial cells has seen a surge in the development of surfaces for the physical killing of bacteria towards the fight against bacterial colonisation of abiotic surfaces. It is established that the nanoarchitecture is directly responsible for the inactivation of bacterial cells; however the mechanobactericidal action remains to be fully elucidated. Here we report the fabrication of superhydrophilic and superhydrophobic black silicon surfaces with well-defined surface geometries and wettability which are responsible for inactivating approximately 98% of P. aeruginosa cells and 97% of S. aureus cells. Increased adhesion of bacterial cells onto superhydrophobic surfaces was not accompanied by increased secretion of extracellular polymeric substances. Surface hydrophobicity has been demonstrated to be statistically unimportant in determining the bactericidal efficiency of nanostructured surfaces.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Tatsuya Shoji; Ayaka Mototsuji; Armandas Balčytis; Denver Linklater; Saulius Juodkazis; Yasuyuki Tsuboi
Nowadays, optical tweezers have undergone explosive developments in accordance with a great progress of lasers. In the last decade, a breakthrough brought optical tweezers into the nano-world, overcoming the diffraction limit. This is called plasmonic optical tweezers (POT). POT are powerful tools used to manipulate nanomaterials. However, POT has several practical issues that need to be overcome. First, it is rather difficult to fabricate plasmonic nanogap structures regularly and rapidly at low cost. Second, in many cases, POT suffers from thermal effects (Marangoni convection and thermophoresis). Here, we propose an alternative approach using a nano-structured material that can enhance the optical force and be applied to optical tweezers. This material is metal-free black silicon (MFBS), the plasma etched nano-textured Si. We demonstrate that MFBS-based optical tweezers can efficiently manipulate small particles by trapping and binding. The advantages of MFBS-based optical tweezers are: (1) simple fabrication with high uniformity over wafer-sized areas, (2) free from thermal effects detrimental for trapping, (3) switchable trapping between one and two - dimensions, (4) tight trapping because of no detrimental thermal forces. This is the NON-PLASMONIC optical tweezers.
Optical Manipulation Conference | 2018
Yuki Uenobo; Tatsuya Shoji; Ayaka Mototsuji; Sawa Komoto; Tatsuya Nagai; Yasuyuki Tsuboi; Juodkazis Saulius; Denver Linklater
We have studied plasmonic optical tweezers (POT) for nanomaterials such as DNA and polymers. These nanomaterials would be efficiently trapped by a plasmon-enhanced optical force. However, plasmon excitation also leads to a photothermal effect. Such heat generation has frequently hindered POT. Recently, we have developed a novel optical trapping technique; Nano-Structured Semi-Conductor-Assisted (NASSCA) optical tweezers. In NASSCA optical tweezers, we used a metal-free black silicon with a nanoneedles structure on the surface. NASSCA optical tweezers presents a useful and powerful manipulation technique without heat generation.
Materials | 2018
Jason Wandiyanto; Denver Linklater; Pallale Tharushi Perera; Anna Orlowska; Vi Khanh Truong; Helmut Thissen; Shahram Ghanaati; Vladimir A. Baulin; Russell J. Crawford; Saulius Juodkazis; Elena P. Ivanova
Titanium is a biocompatible material that is frequently used for making implantable medical devices. Nanoengineering of the surface is the common method for increasing material biocompatibility, and while the nanostructured materials are well-known to represent attractive substrata for eukaryotic cells, very little information has been documented about the interaction between mammalian cells and bactericidal nanostructured surfaces. In this study, we investigated the effect of bactericidal titanium nanostructures on PC12 cell attachment and differentiation—a cell line which has become a widely used in vitro model to study neuronal differentiation. The effects of the nanostructures on the cells were then compared to effects observed when the cells were placed in contact with non-structured titanium. It was found that bactericidal nanostructured surfaces enhanced the attachment of neuron-like cells. In addition, the PC12 cells were able to differentiate on nanostructured surfaces, while the cells on non-structured surfaces were not able to do so. These promising results demonstrate the potential application of bactericidal nanostructured surfaces in biomedical applications such as cochlear and neuronal implants.
Frontiers in Ultrafast Optics: Biomedical, Scientific, and Industrial Applications XVIII | 2018
Saulius Juodkazis; Denver Linklater; Mangirdas Malinauskas; Tomas Katkus; Simonas Varapnickas; Stefan Lundgaard; Soon Hock Ng; Simon Moulton; Pierre-Louis de Assis; Stanislav Moshkalev
Nano-texturing of surface by self-organised ablation ripples as well as modifications of internal volume of materials, transparent at the wavelength of laser irradiation, is gaining interest due to simplicity of direct laser writing/printing. With ultra-short laser pulses (τp < 1 ps) a wider range of structuring morphologies is accessible, namely, sub-wavelength ripples. The surface wave formed on the plasma-dielectric (air or substrate) explains difference of the formed pattern. These corresponding front- and back-side (in respect to the incoming laser beam) modes of laser structuring accounts for the ripple formation inside transparent materials, where a skin-layer plasma is formed. Emerging applications of nano-textured surfaces for bio-medical field are discussed.
ACS Omega | 2018
Samuel Cheeseman; Stephanie Owen; Vi Khanh Truong; Denny Meyer; Soon Hock Ng; Jitraporn Vongsvivut; Denver Linklater; Mark J. Tobin; Marco Werner; Vladimir A. Baulin; Pere Luque; Richard Marchant; Saulius Juodkazis; Russell J. Crawford; Elena P. Ivanova
Dragonfly wings are of great interest to researchers investigating biomimetic designs for antiwetting and antibacterial surfaces. The waxy epicuticular layer on the membrane of dragonfly wings possesses a unique surface nanoarchitecture that consists of irregular arrays of nanoscale pillars. This architecture confers superhydrophobic, self-cleaning, antiwetting, and antibiofouling behaviors. There is some evidence available that suggests that lifestyle factors may have influenced the evolution of the wing nanostructures and, therefore, the resulting properties of the wings; however, it appears that no systematic studies have been performed that have compared the wing surface features across a range of dragonfly species. Here, we provided a comparison of relevant wing surface characteristics, including chemical composition, wettability, and nanoarchitecture, of seven species of dragonfly from three families including Libellulidae, Aeshnidae, and Gomphidae. The characteristic nanopillar arrays were found to be present, and the chemical composition and the resultant wing surface superhydrophobicity were found to be well-conserved across all of the species studied. However, subtle differences were observed between the height, width, and density of nanofeatures and water droplet bouncing behavior on the wing surfaces. The results of this research will contribute to an understanding of the physical and chemical surface features that are optimal for the design of antiwetting and antibacterial surfaces.
ACS Nano | 2018
Denver Linklater; Michael De Volder; Vladimir A. Baulin; Marco Werner; Sarah Jessl; Mehdi Golozar; Laura Maggini; Sergey Rubanov; Eric Hanssen; Saulius Juodkazis; Elena P. Ivanova
The threat of a global rise in the number of untreatable infections caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria calls for the design and fabrication of a new generation of bactericidal materials. Here, we report a concept for the design of antibacterial surfaces, whereby cell death results from the ability of the nanofeatures to deflect when in contact with attaching cells. We show, using three-dimensional transmission electron microscopy, that the exceptionally high aspect ratio (100-3000) of vertically aligned carbon nanotubes (VACNTs) imparts extreme flexibility, which enhances the elastic energy storage in CNTs as they bend in contact with bacteria. Our experimental and theoretical analyses demonstrate that, for high aspect ratio structures, the bending energy stored in the CNTs is a substantial factor for the physical rupturing of both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. The highest bactericidal rates (99.3% for Pseudomonas aeruginosa and 84.9% for Staphylococcus aureus) were obtained by modifying the length of the VACNTs, allowing us to identify the optimal substratum properties to kill different types of bacteria efficiently. This work highlights that the bactericidal activity of high aspect ratio nanofeatures can outperform both natural bactericidal surfaces and other synthetic nanostructured multifunctional surfaces reported in previous studies. The present systems exhibit the highest bactericidal activity of a CNT-based substratum against a Gram-negative bacterium reported to date, suggesting the possibility of achieving close to 100% bacterial inactivation on VACNT-based substrata.
Nanoscale | 2017
Denver Linklater; Saulius Juodkazis; Elena P. Ivanova