Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Erik Herz is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Erik Herz.


Nature | 2009

Demonstration of a spaser-based nanolaser

M. A. Noginov; G. Zhu; A M Belgrave; Reuben M. Bakker; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Evgenii E. Narimanov; S Stout; Erik Herz; Teeraporn Suteewong; Ulrich Wiesner

One of the most rapidly growing areas of physics and nanotechnology focuses on plasmonic effects on the nanometre scale, with possible applications ranging from sensing and biomedicine to imaging and information technology. However, the full development of nanoplasmonics is hindered by the lack of devices that can generate coherent plasmonic fields. It has been proposed that in the same way as a laser generates stimulated emission of coherent photons, a ‘spaser’ could generate stimulated emission of surface plasmons (oscillations of free electrons in metallic nanostructures) in resonating metallic nanostructures adjacent to a gain medium. But attempts to realize a spaser face the challenge of absorption loss in metal, which is particularly strong at optical frequencies. The suggestion to compensate loss by optical gain in localized and propagating surface plasmons has been implemented recently and even allowed the amplification of propagating surface plasmons in open paths. Still, these experiments and the reported enhancement of the stimulated emission of dye molecules in the presence of metallic nanoparticles lack the feedback mechanism present in a spaser. Here we show that 44-nm-diameter nanoparticles with a gold core and dye-doped silica shell allow us to completely overcome the loss of localized surface plasmons by gain and realize a spaser. And in accord with the notion that only surface plasmon resonances are capable of squeezing optical frequency oscillations into a nanoscopic cavity to enable a true nanolaser, we show that outcoupling of surface plasmon oscillations to photonic modes at a wavelength of 531 nm makes our system the smallest nanolaser reported to date—and to our knowledge the first operating at visible wavelengths. We anticipate that now it has been realized experimentally, the spaser will advance our fundamental understanding of nanoplasmonics and the development of practical applications.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Multimodal silica nanoparticles are effective cancer-targeted probes in a model of human melanoma

Miriam Benezra; Oula Penate-Medina; Pat Zanzonico; David Schaer; Hooisweng Ow; Andrew Burns; Elisa DeStanchina; Valerie A. Longo; Erik Herz; Srikant K. Iyer; Jedd D. Wolchok; Steven M. Larson; Ulrich Wiesner; Michelle S. Bradbury

Nanoparticle-based materials, such as drug delivery vehicles and diagnostic probes, currently under evaluation in oncology clinical trials are largely not tumor selective. To be clinically successful, the next generation of nanoparticle agents should be tumor selective, nontoxic, and exhibit favorable targeting and clearance profiles. Developing probes meeting these criteria is challenging, requiring comprehensive in vivo evaluations. Here, we describe our full characterization of an approximately 7-nm diameter multimodal silica nanoparticle, exhibiting what we believe to be a unique combination of structural, optical, and biological properties. This ultrasmall cancer-selective silica particle was recently approved for a first-in-human clinical trial. Optimized for efficient renal clearance, it concurrently achieved specific tumor targeting. Dye-encapsulating particles, surface functionalized with cyclic arginine-glycine-aspartic acid peptide ligands and radioiodine, exhibited high-affinity/avidity binding, favorable tumor-to-blood residence time ratios, and enhanced tumor-selective accumulation in αvβ3 integrin-expressing melanoma xenografts in mice. Further, the sensitive, real-time detection and imaging of lymphatic drainage patterns, particle clearance rates, nodal metastases, and differential tumor burden in a large-animal model of melanoma highlighted the distinct potential advantage of this multimodal platform for staging metastatic disease in the clinical setting.


Nano Letters | 2009

Fluorescent Silica Nanoparticles with Efficient Urinary Excretion for Nanomedicine

Andrew Burns; Jelena Vider; Hooisweng Ow; Erik Herz; Oula Penate-Medina; Martin Baumgart; Steven M. Larson; Ulrich Wiesner; Michelle S. Bradbury

The development of molecularly targeted probes that exhibit high biostability, biocompatibility, and efficient clearance profiles is key to optimizing biodistribution and transport across biological barriers. Further, coupling probes designed to meet these criteria with high-sensitivity, quantitative imaging strategies is mandatory for ensuring early in vivo tumor detection and timely treatment response. These challenges have often only been examined individually, impeding the clinical translation of fluorescent probes. By simultaneously optimizing these design criteria, we created a new generation of near-infrared fluorescent core-shell silica-based nanoparticles (C dots) tuned to hydrodynamic diameters of 3.3 and 6.0 nm with improved photophysical characteristics over the parent dye. A neutral organic coating prevented adsorption of serum proteins and facilitated efficient urinary excretion. Detailed particle biodistribution studies were performed using more quantitative ex vivo fluorescence detection protocols and combined optical-PET imaging. The results suggest that this new generation of C dots constitutes a promising clinically translatable materials platform which may be adapted for tumor targeting and treatment.


Nature Materials | 2012

A silica sol–gel design strategy for nanostructured metallic materials

Scott C. Warren; Matthew R. Perkins; Ashley M. Adams; Marleen Kamperman; Andrew Burns; Hitesh Arora; Erik Herz; Teeraporn Suteewong; Hiroaki Sai; Zihui Li; Jörg G. Werner; Juho Song; Ulrike Werner-Zwanziger; Josef W. Zwanziger; Michael Grätzel; Francis J. DiSalvo; Ulrich Wiesner

Batteries, fuel cells and solar cells, among many other high-current-density devices, could benefit from the precise meso- to macroscopic structure control afforded by the silica sol-gel process. The porous materials made by silica sol-gel chemistry are typically insulators, however, which has restricted their application. Here we present a simple, yet highly versatile silica sol-gel process built around a multifunctional sol-gel precursor that is derived from the following: amino acids, hydroxy acids or peptides; a silicon alkoxide; and a metal acetate. This approach allows a wide range of biological functionalities and metals--including noble metals--to be combined into a library of sol-gel materials with a high degree of control over composition and structure. We demonstrate that the sol-gel process based on these precursors is compatible with block-copolymer self-assembly, colloidal crystal templating and the Stöber process. As a result of the exceptionally high metal content, these materials can be thermally processed to make porous nanocomposites with metallic percolation networks that have an electrical conductivity of over 1,000 S cm(-1). This improves the electrical conductivity of porous silica sol-gel nanocomposites by three orders of magnitude over existing approaches, opening applications to high-current-density devices.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Functional tomographic fluorescence imaging of pH microenvironments in microbial biofilms by use of silica nanoparticle sensors.

Gabriela Hidalgo; Andrew Burns; Erik Herz; Anthony G. Hay; Paul L. Houston; Ulrich Wiesner; Leonard W. Lion

ABSTRACT Attached bacterial communities can generate three-dimensional (3D) physicochemical gradients that create microenvironments where local conditions are substantially different from those in the surrounding solution. Given their ubiquity in nature and their impacts on issues ranging from water quality to human health, better tools for understanding biofilms and the gradients they create are needed. Here we demonstrate the use of functional tomographic imaging via confocal fluorescence microscopy of ratiometric core-shell silica nanoparticle sensors (C dot sensors) to study the morphology and temporal evolution of pH microenvironments in axenic Escherichia coli PHL628 and mixed-culture wastewater biofilms. Testing of 70-, 30-, and 10-nm-diameter sensor particles reveals a critical size for homogeneous biofilm staining, with only the 10-nm-diameter particles capable of successfully generating high-resolution maps of biofilm pH and distinct local heterogeneities. Our measurements revealed pH values that ranged from 5 to >7, confirming the heterogeneity of the pH profiles within these biofilms. pH was also analyzed following glucose addition to both suspended and attached cultures. In both cases, the pH became more acidic, likely due to glucose metabolism causing the release of tricarboxylic acid cycle acids and CO2. These studies demonstrate that the combination of 3D functional fluorescence imaging with well-designed nanoparticle sensors provides a powerful tool for in situ characterization of chemical microenvironments in complex biofilms.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2009

Dye structure–optical property correlations in near-infrared fluorescent core-shell silica nanoparticles

Erik Herz; Hooisweng Ow; Daniel K. Bonner; Andrew Burns; Ulrich Wiesner

In this paper we report on dye structure–optical property correlations for a range of near-infrared emitting (NIR, 650–900 nm) fluorescent dyes in a 9–14 nm diameter core-shell silica particle architecture (C dots), including Cy5, Alexa Fluor 700, DY730, Alexa Fluor 750, and DY780. For each dye an apparent per-dye enhancement in fluorescence is observed over free dye in aqueous solution ranging from 1.2× to 6.6×, highlighting the versatility of the silica encapsulation approach. For the Cy5 and DY730 dye/particle sample pairs photobleaching was undertaken and revealed that the particles photobleach slower than the dyes. For a particular NIR dye series with identical chemical backbone, DY730, DY731, DY732, and DY734, we demonstrate that with increasing number of sulfonated substituent groups the per-dye brightness enhancement decreases. Finally, we show that in special cases, like Cy5, brightness enhancement of dyes in dots over free dye may be a combination of effects from dye conjugation chemistry and immobilization in the silica matrix. These results provide powerful design criteria for next generation optical probes for applications ranging from bioimaging to security.


Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2009

Large stokes-shift fluorescent silica nanoparticles with enhanced emission over free dye for single excitation multiplexing.

Erik Herz; Andrew Burns; Daniel K. Bonner; Ulrich Wiesner

We describe a polycondensation reaction of silica precursors in a modified Stober-type basic ethanol solution to produce graded Stokes-shift core-shell silica nanoparticles providing bright and spectrally multiplexed sets of fluorescent tags that are excitable using a single excitation source. Dynamic light scattering and scanning electron microscopy demonstrate particle sizes in the sub-10 nm regime. Absorption matched emission comparisons between encapsulated and free dyes in aqueous solution reveal about an order of magnitude per-dye brightness enhancements that are apparent by simply looking at the solutions under laser illumination conditions.


Biomedical optics | 2006

Fluorescent Core-Shell Silica Nanoparticles: An Alternative Radiative Materials Platform

Erik Herz; Andrew Burns; Stephanie H. Lee; Prabuddha Sengupta; Daniel K. Bonner; Hooisweng Ow; Chekesha M. Liddell; Barbara Baird; Ulrich Wiesner

We report on monodisperse fluorescent core-shell silica nanoparticles (C dots) with enhanced brightness and photostability as compared to parent free dye in aqueous solution. Dots containing either tetramethylrhodamine or 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole dyes with diameters ranging from tens of nanometers to microns are discussed. The benefits of the core-shell architecture are described in terms of enhanced fluorescent yield of the fluorophores in the quasi-solid-state environment within the particle as compared with parent free dye in water. Several applications of these particles in the fields of photonics and the life sciences are discussed. Specifically, fluorescent core-shell silica nanoparticles are investigated as an active medium for photonic building blocks assembled on zinc sulfide-based seed particles. Initial assembly results for these composite raspberry structures are shown. Finally, applications in the life sciences are explored, including targeting of specific antibody receptors using these single-emission nanoparticles. We expand on single-emission core-shell architecture to incorporate environmentally-sensitive fluorophores to create quantitative ratiometric nanoscale sensors capable of interrogating chemical concentrations on the sub-cellular to molecular levels and demonstrate initial results of intracellular pH imaging. The concept of a single particle laboratory (SPL) is introduced as an active investigator of its environment.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2007

Deposition of functionalized nanoparticles in multilayer thin-film structures by resonant infrared laser ablation

Michael R. Papantonakis; Erik Herz; Duane L. Simonson; Ulrich Wiesner; Richard F. Haglund

We report the successful fabrication of layers of functionalized nanoparticles using a novel infrared, laser-based deposition technique. A frozen suspension of nanoparticles was ablated with a laser tuned to a vibrational mode of the solvent, resulting in the disruption of the matrix and ejection of the nanoparticles. The solvent was pumped away and the nanoparticles collected by a receiving substrate in a conformal process. Photoluminescence measurements of nanoparticles containing two common dyes showed no significant change to the emission properties of either dye, suggesting that no damage occurred during the laser ablation process. The process is generally applicable to particles of various sizes, shapes, and chemistries provided that an appropriate solvent is chosen. Deposition through shadow masks turned out to be straightforward using this technique, suggesting its potential utility in preparing designer sensor structures using functionalized nanoparticles.


Journal of Fluorescence | 2010

Relative Quantum Yield Measurements of Coumarin Encapsulated in Core-Shell Silica Nanoparticles

Erik Herz; Thomas Marchincin; Laura Connelly; Daniel K. Bonner; Andrew Burns; Steven C. Switalski; Ulrich Wiesner

Collaboration


Dive into the Erik Herz's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel K. Bonner

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. Zhu

Norfolk State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. A. Noginov

Norfolk State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge