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Dive into the research topics where Douglas H. Lowndes is active.

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Featured researches published by Douglas H. Lowndes.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2005

Vertically aligned carbon nanofibers and related structures: Controlled synthesis and directed assembly

Anatoli V. Melechko; Vladimir I. Merkulov; Timothy E. McKnight; M. A. Guillorn; Kate L Klein; Douglas H. Lowndes; Michael L. Simpson

The controlled synthesis of materials by methods that permit their assembly into functional nanoscale structures lies at the crux of the emerging field of nanotechnology. Although only one of several materials families is of interest, carbon-based nanostructured materials continue to attract a disproportionate share of research effort, in part because of their wide-ranging properties. Additionally, developments of the past decade in the controlled synthesis of carbon nanotubes and nanofibers have opened additional possibilities for their use as functional elements in numerous applications. Vertically aligned carbon nanofibers (VACNFs) are a subclass of carbon nanostructured materials that can be produced with a high degree of control using catalytic plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor deposition (C-PECVD). Using C-PECVD the location, diameter, length, shape, chemical composition, and orientation can be controlled during VACNF synthesis. Here we review the CVD and PECVD systems, growth control mechanisms, catalyst preparation, resultant carbon nanostructures, and VACNF properties. This is followed by a review of many of the application areas for carbon nanotubes and nanofibers including electron field-emission sources, electrochemical probes, functionalized sensor elements, scanning probe microscopy tips, nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS), hydrogen and charge storage, and catalyst support. We end by noting gaps in the understanding of VACNF growth mechanisms and the challenges remaining in the development of methods for an even more comprehensive control of the carbon nanofiber synthesis process.The controlled synthesis of materials by methods that permit their assembly into functional nanoscale structures lies at the crux of the emerging field of nanotechnology. Although only one of several materials families is of interest, carbon-based nanostructured materials continue to attract a disproportionate share of research effort, in part because of their wide-ranging properties. Additionally, developments of the past decade in the controlled synthesis of carbon nanotubes and nanofibers have opened additional possibilities for their use as functional elements in numerous applications. Vertically aligned carbon nanofibers (VACNFs) are a subclass of carbon nanostructured materials that can be produced with a high degree of control using catalytic plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor deposition (C-PECVD). Using C-PECVD the location, diameter, length, shape, chemical composition, and orientation can be controlled during VACNF synthesis. Here we review the CVD and PECVD systems, growth control mechanisms, catal...


Nature | 2005

Strong polarization enhancement in asymmetric three-component ferroelectric superlattices

Ho Nyung Lee; Hans M. Christen; Matthew F. Chisholm; Christopher M. Rouleau; Douglas H. Lowndes

Theoretical predictions—motivated by recent advances in epitaxial engineering—indicate a wealth of complex behaviour arising in superlattices of perovskite-type metal oxides. These include the enhancement of polarization by strain and the possibility of asymmetric properties in three-component superlattices. Here we fabricate superlattices consisting of barium titanate (BaTiO3), strontium titanate (SrTiO3) and calcium titanate (CaTiO3) with atomic-scale control by high-pressure pulsed laser deposition on conducting, atomically flat strontium ruthenate (SrRuO3) layers. The strain in BaTiO3 layers is fully maintained as long as the BaTiO3 thickness does not exceed the combined thicknesses of the CaTiO3 and SrTiO3 layers. By preserving full strain and combining heterointerfacial couplings, we find an overall 50% enhancement of the superlattice global polarization with respect to similarly grown pure BaTiO3, despite the fact that half the layers in the superlattice are nominally non-ferroelectric. We further show that even superlattices containing only single-unit-cell layers of BaTiO3 in a paraelectric matrix remain ferroelectric. Our data reveal that the specific interface structure and local asymmetries play an unexpected role in the polarization enhancement.


Applied Physics Letters | 2000

Patterned growth of individual and multiple vertically aligned carbon nanofibers

Vladimir I. Merkulov; Douglas H. Lowndes; Y. Y. Wei; Gyula Eres; Edgar Voelkl

The results of studies of patterned growth of vertically aligned carbon nanofibers (VACNFs) prepared by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition are reported. Nickel (Ni) dots of various diameters and Ni lines with variable widths and shapes were fabricated using electron beam lithography and evaporation, and served for catalytic growth of VACNFs whose structure was determined by high resolution transmission electron microscopy. It is found that upon plasma pre-etching and heating up to 600–700 °C, thin films of Ni break into droplets which initiate the growth of VACNFs. Above a critical dot size multiple droplets are formed, and consequently multiple VACNFs grow from a single evaporated dot. For dot sizes smaller than the critical size only one droplet is formed, resulting in a single VACNF. In the case of a patterned line, the growth mechanism is similar to that from a dot. VACNFs grow along the line, and above a critical linewidth multiple VACNFs are produced across the line. The mechanism of the form...


Applied Physics Letters | 2001

Effect of catalyst film thickness on carbon nanotube growth by selective area chemical vapor deposition

Yayi Wei; Gyula Eres; Vladimir I. Merkulov; Douglas H. Lowndes

The correlation between prepatterned catalyst film thickness and carbon nanotube (CNT) growth by selective area chemical vapor deposition (CVD) was studied using Fe and Ni as catalyst. To eliminate sample-to-sample variations and create a growth environment in which the film thickness is the sole variable, samples with continuously changing catalyst film thickness from 0 to 60 nm were fabricated by electron-gun evaporation. Using thermal CVD CNTs preferentially grow as a dense mat on the thin regions of the catalyst film. Moreover, beyond a certain critical film thickness no tubes were observed. The critical film thickness for CNT growth was found to increase with substrate temperature. There appears to be no strong correlation between the film thickness and the diameter of the tubes. In contrast, using plasma enhanced CVD with Ni as catalyst, vertically oriented CNTs grow in the entire range of catalyst film thickness. The diameter of these CNTs shows a strong correlation with the catalyst film thickness...


Applied Physics Letters | 1999

Silicon microcolumn arrays grown by nanosecond pulsed-excimer laser irradiation

A. J. Pedraza; J. D. Fowlkes; Douglas H. Lowndes

Arrays of high aspect ratio silicon microcolumns that protrude well above the initial surface have been formed by cumulative nanosecond pulsed-excimer laser irradiation of silicon. Microcolumn growth is strongly affected by the gas environment, being enhanced in air or other oxygen-containing ambient. It is proposed that microcolumn growth occurs through a combination of pulsed-laser melting of the tips of the columns and deposition of silicon from the intense flux of silicon-rich vapor produced by ablation of the surface regions between columns. The molten tips of the columns are strongly preferred sites for deposition, resulting in a very high axial growth rate. The growth process is conceptually similar to the vapor–liquid–solid method used to grow silicon whiskers. However, in the present case the pulsed-laser radiation fulfills two roles almost simultaneously, viz., providing the flux of silicon-containing molecules and melting the tips of the columns.


Applied Physics Letters | 2001

Alignment mechanism of carbon nanofibers produced by plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor deposition

Vladimir I. Merkulov; Anatoli V. Melechko; Michael A. Guillorn; Douglas H. Lowndes; Michael L. Simpson

We report experimental evidence showing a direct correlation between the alignment of carbon nanofibers (CNFs) prepared by plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor deposition and the location of the catalyst particle during CNF growth. In particular, we find that CNFs that have a catalyst particle at the tip (i.e., growth proceeds from the tip) align along the electric-field lines, whereas CNFs with the particle at the base (i.e., growth proceeds from the base) grow in random orientations. We propose a model that explains the alignment process as a result of a feedback mechanism associated with a nonuniform stress (part tensile, part compressive) that is created across the interface of the catalyst particle with the CNF due to electrostatic forces. Furthermore, we propose that the alignment seen recently in some dense CNF films is due to a crowding effect and is not directly the result of electrostatic forces.


Applied Physics Letters | 1993

Structural and electrical properties of La0.5Sr0.5CoO3 epitaxial films

Jeffrey T. Cheung; Peter E. D. Morgan; Douglas H. Lowndes; X‐Y Zheng; John Breen

Epitaxial La0.5Sr0.5CoO3 films with very smooth surface morphology were grown on (100) SrTiO3 and (100) MgO substrates by pulsed laser deposition. Scanning tunneling microscopy reveals that the thin film is formed by the coalescence of many aligned square mesas. The growth proceeds from the edges of terraces which are stacked on the mesa. Spiral growth is never observed. Films display an crystallographically isotropic metallic‐like electrical conductivity but become semiconductor‐like after vacuum annealing. The energy for carrier activation is 0.3 eV. The change of the electrical resistivity of La0.5Sr0.5CoO3 with oxygen pressure at high temperature is much less sensitive than that of YBa2Cu3O7−x.


Applied Physics Letters | 2001

Shaping carbon nanostructures by controlling the synthesis process

Vladimir I. Merkulov; Michael A. Guillorn; Douglas H. Lowndes; Michael L. Simpson; Edgar Voelkl

The ability to control the nanoscale shape of nanostructures in a large-scale synthesis process is an essential and elusive goal of nanotechnology research. Here, we report significant progress toward that goal. We have developed a technique that enables controlled synthesis of nanoscale carbon structures with conical and cylinder-on-cone shapes and provides the capability to dynamically change the nanostructure shape during the synthesis process. In addition, we present a phenomenological model that explains the formation of these nanostructures and provides insight into methods for precisely engineering their shape. Since the growth process we report is highly deterministic in allowing large-scale synthesis of precisely engineered nanoscale components at defined locations, our approach provides an important tool for a practical nanotechnology.


Nanotechnology | 2003

Intracellular integration of synthetic nanostructures with viable cells for controlled biochemical manipulation

Timothy E. McKnight; Anatoli V. Melechko; Guy D. Griffin; Michael A. Guillorn; Vladimir I. Merkulov; Francisco Serna; Dale K. Hensley; Mitchel J. Doktycz; Douglas H. Lowndes; Michael L. Simpson

We demonstrate the integration of vertically aligned carbon nanofibre (VACNF) elements with the intracellular domains of viable cells for controlled biochemical manipulation. Deterministically synthesized VACNFs were modified with either adsorbed or covalently-linked plasmid DNA and were subsequently inserted into cells. Post insertion viability of the cells was demonstrated by continued proliferation of the interfaced cells and long-term (}22


Chemical Physics Letters | 2003

Growth behavior of carbon nanotubes on multilayered metal catalyst film in chemical vapor deposition

H. Cui; Gyula Eres; Jane Y. Howe; A. Puretkzy; M. Varela; David B. Geohegan; Douglas H. Lowndes

>> 22 day) expression of the introduced plasmid. Adsorbed plasmids were typically desorbed in the intracellular domain and segregated to progeny cells. Covalently bound plasmids remained tethered to nanofibres and were expressed in interfaced cells but were not partitioned into progeny, and gene expression ceased when the nanofibre was no longer retained. This provides a method for achieving a genetic modification that is non-inheritable and whose extent in time can be directly and precisely controlled. These results demonstrate the potential of VACNF arrays as an intracellular interface for monitoring and controlling subcellular and molecular phenomena within viable cells for applications including biosensors, in vivo diagnostics, and in vivo logic devices.

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Vladimir I. Merkulov

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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J. D. Budai

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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D. K. Christen

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Anatoli V. Melechko

North Carolina State University

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Michael A. Guillorn

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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G. E. Jellison

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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David B. Geohegan

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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