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Dive into the research topics where En-Te Hwu is active.

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Featured researches published by En-Te Hwu.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Simultaneous detection of translational and angular displacements of micromachined elements

En-Te Hwu; Shao-Kang Hung; Chih-Wen Yang; Ing-Shouh Hwang; Kuang-Yuh Huang

An astigmatic detection system is constructed with a modified digital-versatile-disk optical head. This system, with a detecting spot of ∼1μm, can simultaneously measure the vertical displacements and two-dimensional angular tilts of micromachined elements. It can detect thermal vibrations of microfabricated cantilevers with noise levels of 1.3pmHz−1∕2 for the linear displacement and of 3.2nradHz−1∕2 for angular displacements over a frequency range from 1to800kHz. The detecting frequency can even reach beyond 100MHz if high-speed electronic devices are adopted. Further optimization of the system will broaden its applications in diverse technological fields.


Japanese Journal of Applied Physics | 2006

Measurement of Cantilever Displacement Using a Compact Disk /Digital Versatile Disk Pickup Head

En-Te Hwu; Kuang-Yuh Huang; Shao-Kang Hung; Ing-Shouh Hwang

We use the optical pickup head of a commercial compact disk (CD)/digital versatile disk (DVD) read only memory (ROM) drive to detect the vertical displacement of micro fabricated cantilever in atomic force microscopy (AFM). Both the contact and AC modes of AFM are demonstrated. The single atomic steps of graphite can be resolved, indicating that atomic resolution in the vertical displacement detection can be achieved with this new setup. The low cost, compact size, and the light weight of CD/DVD optical pickups may offer new advantages in future AFM designs.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2015

Quantification of rolling circle amplified DNA using magnetic nanobeads and a Blu-ray optical pick-up unit

Marco Donolato; Paula Soares Martins Antunes; Teresa Zardán Gómez del a Torre; En-Te Hwu; Ching-Hsiu Chen; Robert Burger; Giovanni Rizzi; Filippo Bosco; Maria Strømme; Anja Boisen; Mikkel Fougt Hansen

We present the first implementation of a Blu-ray optical pickup unit (OPU) for the high-performance low-cost readout of a homogeneous assay in a multichamber microfluidic disc with a chamber thickness of 600 μm. The assay relies on optical measurements of the dynamics of magnetic nanobeads in an oscillating magnetic field applied along the light propagation direction. The laser light provided by the OPU is transmitted through the sample chamber and reflected back onto the photo detector array of the OPU via a mirror. Spectra of the 2nd harmonic photo detector signal vs. the frequency of the applied magnetic field show a characteristic peak due to freely rotating magnetic nanobeads. Beads bound to ~1 μm coils of DNA formed off-chip by padlock probe recognition and rolling circle amplification show a different dynamics and the intensity of the characteristic peak decreases. We have determined the optimum magnetic bead concentration to 0.1mg/mL and have measured the response vs. concentration of DNA coils formed from Escherichia Coli. We have found a limit of detection of 10 pM and a dynamic range of about two orders of magnitude, which is comparable to the performance obtained using costly and bulky laboratory equipment. The presented device leverages on the advanced but low-cost technology of Blu-ray OPUs to provide a low-cost and high-performance magnetic bead-based readout of homogeneous bioassays. The device is highly flexible and we have demonstrated its use on microfluidic chambers in a disc with a thickness compatible with current optical media mass-production facilities.


Lab on a Chip | 2011

High throughput label-free platform for statistical bio-molecular sensing.

Filippo Bosco; En-Te Hwu; Ching-Hsiu Chen; Stephan Sylvest Keller; Michael Bache; Mogens Havsteen Jakobsen; Ing-Shouh Hwang; Anja Boisen

Sensors are crucial in many daily operations including security, environmental control, human diagnostics and patient monitoring. Screening and online monitoring require reliable and high-throughput sensing. We report on the demonstration of a high-throughput label-free sensor platform utilizing cantilever based sensors. These sensors have often been acclaimed to facilitate highly parallelized operation. Unfortunately, so far no concept has been presented which offers large datasets as well as easy liquid sample handling. We use optics and mechanics from a DVD player to handle liquid samples and to read-out cantilever deflection and resonant frequency. Also, surface roughness is measured. When combined with cantilever deflection the roughness is discovered to hold valuable additional information on specific and unspecific binding events. In a few minutes, 30 liquid samples can be analyzed in parallel, each by 24 cantilever-based sensors. The approach was used to detect the binding of streptavidin and antibodies.


IEEE-ASME Transactions on Mechatronics | 2007

Dual-Stage Piezoelectric Nano-Positioner Utilizing a Range-Extended Optical Fiber Fabry–Perot Interferometer

Shao-Kang Hung; En-Te Hwu; Mei Yung Chen; Li-Chen Fu

This paper proposes a new modulation scheme using high-order harmonic information to solve the so-called ambiguity problem of interferometry. To start with, we build a fiber Fabry-Perot interferometer to serve as a displacement sensor, which has two operation modes - coarse and fine modes. Integrating the afore-developed sensor, a piezoelectric actuator, and a scheduled proportional-integral/adaptive-sliding controller, we construct a dual-stage nanopositioning system. The experimental results show that the proposed system has the capability to extend the positioning range beyond the limit of the wavelength while keeping the naturally high resolution, plusmn5 nm, of interferometry.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2016

Blu-ray based optomagnetic aptasensor for detection of small molecules

Jaeyoung Yang; Marco Donolato; Alessandro Pinto; Filippo Bosco; En-Te Hwu; Ching Hsiu Chen; Tommy Sonne Alstrøm; Gwan Hyoung Lee; Thomas Schäfer; P. Vavassori; Anja Boisen; Qiao Lin; Mikkel Fougt Hansen

This paper describes an aptamer-based optomagnetic biosensor for detection of a small molecule based on target binding-induced inhibition of magnetic nanoparticle (MNP) clustering. For the detection of a target small molecule, two mutually exclusive binding reactions (aptamer-target binding and aptamer-DNA linker hybridization) are designed. An aptamer specific to the target and a DNA linker complementary to a part of the aptamer sequence are immobilized onto separate MNPs. Hybridization of the DNA linker and the aptamer induces formation of MNP clusters. The target-to-aptamer binding on MNPs prior to the addition of linker-functionalized MNPs significantly hinders the hybridization reaction, thus reducing the degree of MNP clustering. The clustering state, which is thus related to the target concentration, is then quantitatively determined by an optomagnetic readout technique that provides the hydrodynamic size distribution of MNPs and their clusters. A commercial Blu-ray optical pickup unit is used for optical signal acquisition, which enables the establishment of a low-cost and miniaturized biosensing platform. Experimental results show that the degree of MNP clustering correlates well with the concentration of a target small molecule, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) in this work, in the range between 10µM and 10mM. This successful proof-of-concept indicates that our optomagnetic aptasensor can be further developed as a low-cost biosensing platform for detection of small molecule biomarkers in an out-of-lab setting.


Measurement Science and Technology | 2009

A hybrid scanning probe microscope (SPM) module based on a DVD optical head

En-Te Hwu; H. Illers; L. Jusko; H.-U. Danzebrink

The development of a highly sensitive (sub-nanometer) and multi-platform scanning probe microscope (SPM) module is presented. The module is based on an optical DVD pick-up head and uses its astigmatic detection scheme to detect the vertical displacement of the SPM cantilevers. The complete hybrid SPM module is capable of scanning in SPM intermittent contact, SPM contact and optical profilometry modes. The module can be used in a modified optical microscope or be implemented in a stand-alone system. Measurement results prove that the mechanical stability of this SPM module is high enough for atomic resolution imaging. Both scanning-sample and scanning-probe-type SPM setups have been tested based on this SPM module. The noise level and drift rate in the z-direction of the stand-alone system are 10 pm (rms) and 0.2 nm min?1, respectively.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Anti-drift and auto-alignment mechanism for an astigmatic atomic force microscope system based on a digital versatile disk optical head.

En-Te Hwu; H. Illers; Wei-Min Wang; Ing-Shouh Hwang; L. Jusko; H.-U. Danzebrink

In this work, an anti-drift and auto-alignment mechanism is applied to an astigmatic detection system (ADS)-based atomic force microscope (AFM) for drift compensation and cantilever alignment. The optical path of the ADS adopts a commercial digital versatile disc (DVD) optical head using the astigmatic focus error signal. The ADS-based astigmatic AFM is lightweight, compact size, low priced, and easy to use. Furthermore, the optical head is capable of measuring sub-atomic displacements of high-frequency AFM probes with a sub-micron laser spot (~570 nm, FWHM) and a high-working bandwidth (80 MHz). Nevertheless, conventional DVD optical heads suffer from signal drift problems. In a previous setup, signal drifts of even thousands of nanometers had been measured. With the anti-drift and auto-alignment mechanism, the signal drift is compensated by actuating a voice coil motor of the DVD optical head. A nearly zero signal drift was achieved. Additional benefits of this mechanism are automatic cantilever alignment and simplified design.


Nanotechnology | 2014

Estimating Young?s modulus of graphene with Raman scattering enhanced by micrometer tip

Shao-Wei Weng; Wei-Hsiang Lin; Wei-Bin Su; En-Te Hwu; Peilin Chen; Tsong-Ru Tsai; Chia-Seng Chang

We demonstrate that the Raman intensities of G and 2D bands of a suspended graphene can be enhanced using a gold tip with an apex size of 2.3 μm. The enhancement decays with the tip-graphene distance exponentially and remains detectable at a distance of 1.5 μm. Raman mappings show that the enhanced area is comparable to the apex size. Application of a bias voltage to the tip can attract the graphene so that Raman signals are intensified. The exponential enhancement-distance relationship enables the measurement of the graphene deformation, and the Youngs modulus of graphene is estimated to be 1.48 TPa.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Operation of astigmatic-detection atomic force microscopy in liquid environments

Hsien-Shun Liao; Ke-Jung Huang; Ing-Shou Hwang; T.-J. Chang; Wesley W. Hsiao; Hsin-Hung Lin; En-Te Hwu; Chia-Seng Chang

The astigmatic detection system (ADS) based on commercial optical pickup head was demonstrated to achieve a sub-nanometer sensitivity in detecting the vertical movement of an object surface in air. The detection laser spot of the ADS was sub-μm and the detection bandwidth was over 80 MHz. These advantages allow detection of high-frequency mechanical resonance of very small objects, which would have many important applications in nanotechnology. In this work, we optimized the operation conditions of ADS to achieve good sensitivity in aqueous solutions. We demonstrated good contrast and good spatial resolution of cancer cells in water with the optical profilometry mode. We also built an ADS-AFM (atomic force microscopy) for imaging in water. A novel cantilever holder was designed, and the spurious peaks were suppressed down to 26.0% of the real resonance peak. Most importantly, we demonstrated that the ADS-AFM could resolve single atomic steps on a graphite substrate and image soft DNA molecules on mica in water.

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Anja Boisen

Technical University of Denmark

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Filippo Bosco

Technical University of Denmark

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Kuang-Yuh Huang

National Taiwan University

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Wei-Min Wang

National Taiwan University

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Hsien-Shun Liao

National Institutes of Health

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Shao-Kang Hung

National Chiao Tung University

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Marco Donolato

Technical University of Denmark

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