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Dive into the research topics where Donald J. Sirbuly is active.

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Featured researches published by Donald J. Sirbuly.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Optical routing and sensing with nanowire assemblies

Donald J. Sirbuly; Matt Law; Peter J. Pauzauskie; Haoquan Yan; Alex Maslov; Kelly P. Knutsen; C. Z. Ning; Richard J. Saykally; Peidong Yang

The manipulation of photons in structures smaller than the wavelength of light is central to the development of nanoscale integrated photonic systems for computing, communications, and sensing. We assemble small groups of freestanding, chemically synthesized nanoribbons and nanowires into model structures that illustrate how light is exchanged between subwavelength cavities made of three different semiconductors. The coupling strength of the optical linkages formed when nanowires are brought into contact depends both on their volume of interaction and angle of intersection. With simple coupling schemes, lasing nanowires can launch coherent pulses of light through ribbon waveguides that are up to a millimeter in length. Also, interwire coupling losses are low enough to allow light to propagate across several right-angle bends in a grid of crossed ribbons. The fraction of the guided wave traveling outside the wire/ribbon cavities is used to link nanowires through space and to separate colors within multiribbon networks. In addition, we find that nanoribbons function efficiently as waveguides in liquid media and provide a unique means for probing molecules in solution or in proximity to the waveguide surface. Our results lay the spadework for photonic devices based on assemblies of active and passive nanowire elements and presage the use of nanowire waveguides in microfluidics and biology.


ACS Nano | 2014

3D optical printing of piezoelectric nanoparticle-polymer composite materials.

Kanguk Kim; Wei Zhu; Xin Qu; Chase Aaronson; William R. McCall; Shaochen Chen; Donald J. Sirbuly

Here we demonstrate that efficient piezoelectric nanoparticle-polymer composite materials can be optically printed into three-dimensional (3D) microstructures using digital projection printing. Piezoelectric polymers were fabricated by incorporating barium titanate (BaTiO3, BTO) nanoparticles into photoliable polymer solutions such as polyethylene glycol diacrylate and exposing to digital optical masks that could be dynamically altered to generate user-defined 3D microstructures. To enhance the mechanical-to-electrical conversion efficiency of the composites, the BTO nanoparticles were chemically modified with acrylate surface groups, which formed direct covalent linkages with the polymer matrix under light exposure. The composites with a 10% mass loading of the chemically modified BTO nanoparticles showed piezoelectric coefficients (d(33)) of ∼ 40 pC/N, which were over 10 times larger than composites synthesized with unmodified BTO nanoparticles and over 2 times larger than composites containing unmodified BTO nanoparticles and carbon nanotubes to boost mechanical stress transfer efficiencies. These results not only provide a tool for fabricating 3D piezoelectric polymers but lay the groundwork for creating highly efficient piezoelectric polymer materials via nanointerfacial tuning.


Nano Letters | 2010

MATRIX-ASSISTED ENERGY CONVERSION IN NANOSTRUCTURED PIEZOELECTRIC ARRAYS

Donald J. Sirbuly; Xianying Wang; Yinmin Wang

We demonstrate an organic/inorganic hybrid energy-harvesting platform, based on nanostructured piezolelectric arrays embedded in an environmental-responsive polymer matrix, which can self-generate electrical power by scavenging energy from the environment. A proof of principle device is designed, fabricated, and tested using vertically aligned ZnO nanowires and heat as the local energy source. The device layout takes advantage of the collective stretching motion of piezoelectric ZnO NWs, induced by the shape-change of the matrix polymer, to convert the thermal energy into direct current with output power densities of ∼20 nW/cm(2) at a heating temperature of ∼65 °C. The responsive nature of polymeric matrices to various stimuli makes this nanostructured piezoelectric architecture a highly versatile approach to scavenging energy from a multitude of environments including fluid-based and chemical-rich systems.


ACS Nano | 2008

Biofunctional subwavelength optical waveguides for biodetection

Donald J. Sirbuly; Nicholas O. Fischer; Shih Chieh J Huang; Alexander B. Artyukhin; Jeffrey B.-H. Tok; Olgica Bakajin; Aleksandr Noy

We report a versatile biofunctional subwavelength photonic device platform for real-time detection of biological molecules. Our devices contain lipid bilayer membranes fused onto metal oxide nanowire waveguides stretched across polymeric flow channels. The lipid bilayers incorporating target receptors are submersed in the propagating evanescent field of the optical cavity. We show that the lipid bilayers in our devices are continuous, have very high mobile fraction, and are resistant to fouling. We also demonstrate that our platform allows rapid membrane exchange. Finally, we use this device to detect the hybridization of specific DNA target sequences in solution to complementary probe DNA strands anchored to the lipid bilayer. This evanescent wave sensing architecture holds great potential for portable, all-optical detection systems.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Piezoelectric Nanoparticle–Polymer Composite Foams

William R. McCall; Kanguk Kim; Cory Heath; Gina La Pierre; Donald J. Sirbuly

Piezoelectric polymer composite foams are synthesized using different sugar-templating strategies. By incorporating sugar grains directly into polydimethylsiloxane mixtures containing barium titanate nanoparticles and carbon nanotubes, followed by removal of the sugar after polymer curing, highly compliant materials with excellent piezoelectric properties can be fabricated. Porosities and elasticity are tuned by simply adjusting the sugar/polymer mass ratio which gave an upper bound on the porosity of 73% and a lower bound on the elastic coefficient of 32 kPa. The electrical performance of the foams showed a direct relationship between porosity and the piezoelectric outputs, giving piezoelectric coefficient values of ∼112 pC/N and a power output of ∼18 mW/cm3 under a load of 10 N for the highest porosity samples. These novel materials should find exciting use in a variety of applications including energy scavenging platforms, biosensors, and acoustic actuators.


Small | 2016

High-Quality, Ultraconformal Aluminum-Doped Zinc Oxide Nanoplasmonic and Hyperbolic Metamaterials.

Conor T. Riley; Joseph S. T. Smalley; K. W. Post; D. N. Basov; Yeshaiahu Fainman; Deli Wang; Zhaowei Liu; Donald J. Sirbuly

Aluminum-doped zinc oxide (AZO) is a tunable low-loss plasmonic material capable of supporting dopant concentrations high enough to operate at telecommunication wavelengths. Due to its ultrahigh conformality and compatibility with semiconductor processing, atomic layer deposition (ALD) is a powerful tool for many plasmonic applications. However, despite many attempts, high-quality AZO with a plasma frequency below 1550 nm has not yet been realized by ALD. Here a simple procedure is devised to tune the optical constants of AZO and enable plasmonic activity at 1550 nm with low loss. The highly conformal nature of ALD is also exploited to coat silicon nanopillars to create localized surface plasmon resonances that are tunable by adjusting the aluminum concentration, thermal conditions, and the use of a ZnO buffer layer. The high-quality AZO is then used to make a layered AZO/ZnO structure that displays negative refraction in the telecommunication wavelength region due to hyperbolic dispersion. Finally, a novel synthetic scheme is demonstrated to create AZO embedded nanowires in ZnO, which also exhibits hyperbolic dispersion.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Detection of bio-organism simulants using random binding on a defect-free photonic crystal

Sarah E. Baker; Michael D. Pocha; Allan S. P. Chang; Donald J. Sirbuly; Stefano Cabrini; Scott Dhuey; Tiziana C. Bond; Sonia E. Létant

The defect-free photonic crystal (PC) slab geometry was explored for size-selective detection of bio-organism simulants. Through feedback between finite-difference time-domain simulations and experiments, we generated a conservative limit of detection estimate for randomized pore filling of a two-dimensional PC slab, and predict that random binding affords the label-free PC-based optical detection of low numbers (of the order of 10) of biological particles.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2010

An analytic model of thermal drift in piezoresistive microcantilever sensors

Albert Loui; Selim Elhadj; Donald J. Sirbuly; Scott K. McCall; Bradley R. Hart; Timothy V. Ratto

A closed-form semiempirical model has been developed to understand the physical origins of thermal drift in piezoresistive microcantilever sensors. The two-component model describes both the effects of temperature-related bending and heat dissipation on the piezoresistance. The temperature-related bending component is based on the Euler–Bernoulli theory of elastic deformation applied to a multilayer cantilever. The heat dissipation component is based on energy conservation per unit time for a piezoresistive cantilever in a Wheatstone bridge circuit, representing a balance between electrical power input and heat dissipation into the environment. Conduction and convection are found to be the primary mechanisms of heat transfer, and the dependence of these effects on the thermal conductivity, temperature, and flow rate of the gaseous environment is described. The thermal boundary layer value that defines the length scale of the heat dissipation phenomenon is treated as an empirical fitting parameter. Using t...


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Near-perfect broadband absorption from hyperbolic metamaterial nanoparticles

Conor T. Riley; Joseph S. T. Smalley; Jeffrey R. J. Brodie; Yeshaiahu Fainman; Donald J. Sirbuly; Zhaowei Liu

Significance The ability to perfectly absorb light with optically thin materials poses a significant challenge for many applications such as camouflage, light detection, and energy harvesting. Current designs require planar reflectors that crack and delaminate after heating or flexing. Moreover, they cannot be transferred to more desirable substrates for mechanically flexible and low-cost applications. Although particulate-based materials overcome these challenges, broadband absorption from standalone systems has not been demonstrated. Here, a class of materials, transferrable hyperbolic metamaterial particles (THMMP), is introduced. When closely packed, these materials show broadband, selective, omnidirectional, perfect absorption. This is demonstrated with nanotubes made on a silicon substrate that exhibit near-perfect absorption at telecommunication wavelengths even after being transferred to a mechanically flexible, visibly transparent polymer. Broadband absorbers are essential components of many light detection, energy harvesting, and camouflage schemes. Current designs are either bulky or use planar films that cause problems in cracking and delamination during flexing or heating. In addition, transferring planar materials to flexible, thin, or low-cost substrates poses a significant challenge. On the other hand, particle-based materials are highly flexible and can be transferred and assembled onto a more desirable substrate but have not shown high performance as an absorber in a standalone system. Here, we introduce a class of particle absorbers called transferable hyperbolic metamaterial particles (THMMP) that display selective, omnidirectional, tunable, broadband absorption when closely packed. This is demonstrated with vertically aligned hyperbolic nanotube (HNT) arrays composed of alternating layers of aluminum-doped zinc oxide and zinc oxide. The broadband absorption measures >87% from 1,200 nm to over 2,200 nm with a maximum absorption of 98.1% at 1,550 nm and remains large for high angles. Furthermore, we show the advantages of particle-based absorbers by transferring the HNTs to a polymer substrate that shows excellent mechanical flexibility and visible transparency while maintaining near-perfect absorption in the telecommunications region. In addition, other material systems and geometries are proposed for a wider range of applications.


Nano Letters | 2012

Stimulus-responsive light coupling and modulation with nanofiber waveguide junctions.

Ilsun Yoon; Kanguk Kim; Sarah E. Baker; Daniel Heineck; Sadik C. Esener; Donald J. Sirbuly

We report a systematic study of light coupling at junctions of overlapping SnO(2) nanofiber waveguides (WGs) as a function of gap separation and guided wavelength. The junctions were assembled on silica substrates using micromanipulation techniques and the gap separation was controlled by depositing thin self-assembled polyelectrolyte coatings at the fiber junctions. We demonstrate that the coupling efficiency is strongly dependent on the gap separation, showing strong fluctuations (0.1 dB/nm) in the power transfer when the separation between nanofibers changes by as little as 2 nm. Experimental results correlate well with numerical simulations using three-dimensional finite-difference time-domain techniques. To demonstrate the feasibility of using coupled nanofiber WGs to modulate light, we encased the junctions in an environment-responsive matrix and exposed the junctions to gaseous vapor. The nanofiber junctions show an ~95% (or ~80%) modulation of the guided 450 nm (or 510 nm) light upon interaction with the gaseous molecules. The results reveal a unique nanofiber-based sensing scheme that does not require a change in the refractive index to detect stimuli, suggesting these structures could play important roles in localized sensing devices including force-based measurements or novel chemically induced light modulators.

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Kanguk Kim

University of California

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Peidong Yang

University of California

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Qian Huang

University of California

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Matt Law

University of California

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Conor T. Riley

University of California

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Ilsun Yoon

University of California

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Sarah E. Baker

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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