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Dive into the research topics where Donglei Fan is active.

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Featured researches published by Donglei Fan.


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Controllable High-Speed Rotation of Nanowires

Donglei Fan; F. Q. Zhu; R. C. Cammarata; C. L. Chien

We report a versatile method for executing controllable high-speed rotation of nanowires by AC voltages applied to multiple electrodes. The rotation of the nanowires can be instantly switched on or off with precisely controlled rotation speed (to at least 1800 rpm), definite chirality, and total angle of rotation. We have determined the torque due to the fluidic drag force on nanowire of different lengths. We also demonstrate a micromotor using a rotating nanowires driving a dust particle into circular motion. This method has been used to rotate magnetic and nonmagnetic nanowires as well as carbon nanotubes.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2010

Subcellular-resolution delivery of a cytokine through precisely manipulated nanowires

Donglei Fan; Zhizhong Yin; Raymond Cheong; Frank Q. Zhu; R. C. Cammarata; C. L. Chien; Andre Levchenko

Precise delivery of molecular doses of biologically active chemicals to a pre-specified single cell among many, or a specific sub-cellular location, is still a largely unmet challenge hampering our understanding of cell biology. Overcoming this could allow unprecedented levels of cell manipulation and targeted intervention. Here, we show that gold nanowires conjugated with cytokine, such as tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα), can be transported along any prescribed trajectory or orientation using electrophoretic and dielectrophoretic forces to a specific location with subcellular resolution. The nanowire, 6 μm long and 300 nm in diameter, delivered the cytokine and activated canonical nuclear factor-kappaB signaling in a single cell. Combined computational modeling and experimentation indicated that cell stimulation was highly localized to the nanowire vicinity. This targeted delivery method has profound implications for controlling signaling events on the single cell level.


Nature Communications | 2014

Ultrahigh-speed rotating nanoelectromechanical system devices assembled from nanoscale building blocks

Kwanoh Kim; Xiaobin Xu; Jianhe Guo; Donglei Fan

The development of rotary nanomotors is crucial for advancing nanoelectromechanical system technology. In this work, we report design, assembly and rotation of ordered arrays of nanomotors. The nanomotors are bottom-up assembled from nanoscale building blocks with nanowires as rotors, patterned nanomagnets as bearings and quadrupole microelectrodes as stators. Arrays of nanomotors rotate with controlled angle, speed (over 18,000 r.p.m.), and chirality by electric fields. Using analytical modelling, we reveal the fundamental nanoscale electrical, mechanical and magnetic interactions in the nanomotor system, which excellently agrees with experimental results and provides critical understanding for designing metallic nanoelectromechanical systems. The nanomotors can be continuously rotated for 15 h over 240,000 cycles. They are applied for controlled biochemical release and demonstrate releasing rate of biochemicals on nanoparticles that can be precisely tuned by mechanical rotations. The innovations reported in this research, from concept, design and actuation to application, are relevant to nanoelectromechanical system, nanomedicine, microfluidics and lab-on-a-chip architectures.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2015

Hierarchical pore-in-pore and wire-in-wire catalysts for rechargeable Zn– and Li–air batteries with ultra-long cycle life and high cell efficiency

Longjun Li; Chao Liu; Guang He; Donglei Fan; Arumugam Manthiram

We report here the design of low-cost hierarchical oxygen reduction/evolution reaction (ORR/OER) catalysts that could achieve higher cell efficiency and several times longer cycle life than conventional Pt/C + IrO2 bifunctional catalysts in metal–air batteries (Zn–air and Li–air batteries).


Applied Physics Letters | 2004

Manipulation of nanowires in suspension by ac electric fields

Donglei Fan; F. Q. Zhu; R. C. Cammarata; C. L. Chien

Nanowires are potential building blocks for nanoscale devices. Manipulation of nanowires in suspension has been a formidable problem. Using ac electric fields applied to strategically designed microelectrodes, nanowires in suspension can be driven to align, to chain, to accelerate in directions parallel and perpendicular to its orientation, to concentrate onto designated places, and to disperse in a controlled manner with high efficiency despite an extremely low Reynolds number at the level of 10−5. The manipulation of nanowires can also be applied to other small elongated entities such as carbon nanotubes.


Small | 2015

Recent Progress on Man‐Made Inorganic Nanomachines

Kwanoh Kim; Jianhe Guo; Xiaobin Xu; Donglei Fan

The successful development of nanoscale machinery, which can operate with high controllability, high precision, long lifetimes, and tunable driving powers, is pivotal for the realization of future intelligent nanorobots, nanofactories, and advanced biomedical devices. However, the development of nanomachines remains one of the most difficult research areas, largely due to the grand challenges in fabrication of devices with complex components and actuation with desired efficiency, precision, lifetime, and/or environmental friendliness. In this work, the cutting-edge efforts toward fabricating and actuating various types of nanomachines and their applications are reviewed, with a special focus on nanomotors made from inorganic nanoscale building blocks, which are introduced according to the employed actuation mechanism. The unique characteristics and obstacles for each type of nanomachine are discussed, and perspectives and challenges of this exciting field are presented.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Ordered Arrays of Raman Nanosensors for Ultrasensitive and Location Predictable Biochemical Detection

Xiaobin Xu; Kwanoh Kim; Huifeng Li; Donglei Fan

Surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) is sensitive enough for single-molecule biochemical detection, but it is extremely difficult to obtain a large number of SERS hotspots for sensitive and reproducible detection. It is even more challenging to assemble the hotspots at designated positions for location predictable sensing. Here, we report an original strategy for the synthesis, manipulation, and assembling of plasmonic nanocapsule SERS sensors for high-sensitivity biochemical detection at predictable locations.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Silicon on-chip bandpass filters for the multiplexing of high sensitivity photonic crystal microcavity biosensors

Hai Yan; Yi Zou; Swapnajit Chakravarty; Chun Ju Yang; Zheng Wang; Naimei Tang; Donglei Fan; Ray T. Chen

A method for the dense integration of high sensitivity photonic crystal (PC) waveguide based biosensors is proposed and experimentally demonstrated on a silicon platform. By connecting an additional PC waveguide filter to a PC microcavity sensor in series, a transmission passband is created, containing the resonances of the PC microcavity for sensing purpose. With proper engineering of the passband, multiple high sensitivity PC microcavity sensors can be integrated into microarrays and be interrogated simultaneously between a single input and a single output port. The concept was demonstrated with a 2-channel L55 PC biosensor array containing PC waveguide filters. The experiment showed that the sensors on both channels can be monitored simultaneously from a single output spectrum. Less than 3 dB extra loss for the additional PC waveguide filter is observed.


Applied Physics Letters | 2006

Efficiency of assembling of nanowires in suspension by ac electric fields

Donglei Fan; F. Q. Zhu; R. C. Cammarata; C. L. Chien

The authors report a versatile and efficient method for assembling nanowires in suspension into scaffolds using ac electric fields. The electric field and its gradient aligns and transports, respectively, the nanowires into scaffolds according to the electric field distributions. The assembling efficiency strongly depends on the frequency of the applied ac voltages and varies as square of the voltage. The assembly morphology is highly influenced by the frequency regardless of applied voltages.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Tunable Release of Multiplex Biochemicals by Plasmonically Active Rotary Nanomotors

Xiaobin Xu; Kwanoh Kim; Donglei Fan

It is highly desirable to precisely tune the molecule release rate from the surfaces of nanoparticles (NPs) that are relevant to cancer therapy and single-cell biology. An innovative mechanism is reported to actively tune the biochemical release rate by rotation of NPs. Plasmonic nanomotors were assembled from NPs and applied in multiplex biochemical release and detection. Both single and multiplex biosignals can be released in a tunable fashion by controlling the rotation speed of the nanomotors. The chemistry and release rate of individual chemicals can be revealed by Raman spectroscopy. The fundamental mechanism was modeled quantitatively and attributed to the fluidic boundary-layer reduction owing to the liquid convection. This work, which explored the synergistic attributes of surface enhanced Raman scattering and nanoelectromechanical systems, could inspire new sensors that are potentially interesting for various bio-applications.

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Xiaobin Xu

University of Texas at Austin

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Ray T. Chen

University of Texas at Austin

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Jianhe Guo

University of Texas at Austin

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Zheng Wang

University of Texas at Austin

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C. L. Chien

Johns Hopkins University

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Alan X. Wang

Oregon State University

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Chao Liu

University of Texas at Austin

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Kwanoh Kim

University of Texas at Austin

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Xiaochuan Xu

University of Texas at Austin

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