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Dive into the research topics where Fiorenzo G. Omenetto is active.

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Featured researches published by Fiorenzo G. Omenetto.


Nature Materials | 2010

Dissolvable films of silk fibroin for ultrathin conformal bio-integrated electronics

Dae-Hyeong Kim; Jonathan Viventi; Jason J. Amsden; Jianliang Xiao; Leif Vigeland; Yun Soung Kim; Justin A. Blanco; Bruce Panilaitis; Eric S. Frechette; Diego Contreras; David L. Kaplan; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; Yonggang Huang; Keh Chih Hwang; Mitchell R. Zakin; Brian Litt; John A. Rogers

Electronics that are capable of intimate, non-invasive integration with the soft, curvilinear surfaces of biological tissues offer important opportunities for diagnosing and treating disease and for improving brain/machine interfaces. This article describes a material strategy for a type of bio-interfaced system that relies on ultrathin electronics supported by bioresorbable substrates of silk fibroin. Mounting such devices on tissue and then allowing the silk to dissolve and resorb initiates a spontaneous, conformal wrapping process driven by capillary forces at the biotic/abiotic interface. Specialized mesh designs and ultrathin forms for the electronics ensure minimal stresses on the tissue and highly conformal coverage, even for complex curvilinear surfaces, as confirmed by experimental and theoretical studies. In vivo, neural mapping experiments on feline animal models illustrate one mode of use for this class of technology. These concepts provide new capabilities for implantable and surgical devices.


Science | 2010

New Opportunities for an Ancient Material

Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; David L. Kaplan

Insight into Silks Silkworms have been cultivated for thousands of years and their silk has been used to make fabrics for clothing, bed sheets, shirts, dresses, and for other applications like sutures. Spider silk is harder to harvest, and thus has not found such widespread use, but its fantastic combination of properties has made it a tempting material to study in detail. Omenetto and Kaplan (p. 528) review our understanding of silk chemistry, the limitations in being able to reconstitute silks and to generate them synthetically, and a range of applications that have been developed using silk materials. Spiders and silkworms generate silk protein fibers that embody strength and beauty. Orb webs are fascinating feats of bioengineering in nature, displaying magnificent architectures while providing essential survival utility for spiders. The unusual combination of high strength and extensibility is a characteristic unavailable to date in synthetic materials yet is attained in nature with a relatively simple protein processed from water. This biological template suggests new directions to emulate in the pursuit of new high-performance, multifunctional materials generated with a green chemistry and processing approach. These bio-inspired and high-technology materials can lead to multifunctional material platforms that integrate with living systems for medical materials and a host of other applications.


Science | 2013

Injectable, Cellular-Scale Optoelectronics with Applications for Wireless Optogenetics

Tae-Il Kim; Jordan G. McCall; Yei Hwan Jung; Xian Huang; Edward R. Siuda; Yuhang Li; Jizhou Song; Young Min Song; Hsuan An Pao; Rak Hwan Kim; Chaofeng Lu; Sung Dan Lee; Il Sun Song; Gunchul Shin; Ream Al-Hasani; Stanley Kim; Meng Peun Tan; Yonggang Huang; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; John A. Rogers; Michael R. Bruchas

The Smaller, the Better New semiconductor device technology enables injection of light-emitting diodes, silicon devices, actuators, and sensors at precisely controlled locations within biological tissues, such as the brain. Kim et al. (p. 211) show how wireless control of animal models using these technologies and the techniques of optogenetics provide new insights into basic behavioral neuroscience. Miniaturized and implantable light-emitting diodes offer precise and flexible control of neurons, when used in combination with optogenetics. Successful integration of advanced semiconductor devices with biological systems will accelerate basic scientific discoveries and their translation into clinical technologies. In neuroscience generally, and in optogenetics in particular, the ability to insert light sources, detectors, sensors, and other components into precise locations of the deep brain yields versatile and important capabilities. Here, we introduce an injectable class of cellular-scale optoelectronics that offers such features, with examples of unmatched operational modes in optogenetics, including completely wireless and programmed complex behavioral control over freely moving animals. The ability of these ultrathin, mechanically compliant, biocompatible devices to afford minimally invasive operation in the soft tissues of the mammalian brain foreshadow applications in other organ systems, with potential for broad utility in biomedical science and engineering.


Science | 2012

A Physically Transient Form of Silicon Electronics

Suk Won Hwang; Hu Tao; Dae-Hyeong Kim; Huanyu Cheng; Jun Kyul Song; Elliott Rill; Mark A. Brenckle; Bruce Panilaitis; Sang Min Won; Yun Soung Kim; Young Min Song; Ki Jun Yu; Abid Ameen; Rui Li; Yewang Su; Miaomiao Yang; David L. Kaplan; Mitchell R. Zakin; Marvin J. Slepian; Yonggang Huang; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; John A. Rogers

Reversible Implants Silicon electronics are generally designed to be stable and robust—it would be counterproductive if the key parts of your computer or cell phone slowly dissolved away while you were using it. In order to develop transient electronics for use as medical implants, Hwang et al. (p. 1640, see the cover) produced a complete set of tools and materials that would be needed to make standard devices. Devices were designed to have a specific lifetime, after which the component materials, such as porous silicon and silk, would be resorbed by the body. A platform of materials and fabrication methods furnishes resorbable electronic devices for in vivo use. A remarkable feature of modern silicon electronics is its ability to remain physically invariant, almost indefinitely for practical purposes. Although this characteristic is a hallmark of applications of integrated circuits that exist today, there might be opportunities for systems that offer the opposite behavior, such as implantable devices that function for medically useful time frames but then completely disappear via resorption by the body. We report a set of materials, manufacturing schemes, device components, and theoretical design tools for a silicon-based complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology that has this type of transient behavior, together with integrated sensors, actuators, power supply systems, and wireless control strategies. An implantable transient device that acts as a programmable nonantibiotic bacteriocide provides a system-level example.


Nature | 2012

Terahertz-field-induced insulator-to-metal transition in vanadium dioxide metamaterial

Mengkun Liu; Harold Y. Hwang; Hu Tao; Andrew C. Strikwerda; Kebin Fan; George R. Keiser; Aaron Sternbach; Kevin G. West; Salinporn Kittiwatanakul; Jiwei Lu; Stuart A. Wolf; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; Xin Zhang; Keith A. Nelson; Richard D. Averitt

Electron–electron interactions can render an otherwise conducting material insulating, with the insulator–metal phase transition in correlated-electron materials being the canonical macroscopic manifestation of the competition between charge-carrier itinerancy and localization. The transition can arise from underlying microscopic interactions among the charge, lattice, orbital and spin degrees of freedom, the complexity of which leads to multiple phase-transition pathways. For example, in many transition metal oxides, the insulator–metal transition has been achieved with external stimuli, including temperature, light, electric field, mechanical strain or magnetic field. Vanadium dioxide is particularly intriguing because both the lattice and on-site Coulomb repulsion contribute to the insulator-to-metal transition at 340 K (ref. 8). Thus, although the precise microscopic origin of the phase transition remains elusive, vanadium dioxide serves as a testbed for correlated-electron phase-transition dynamics. Here we report the observation of an insulator–metal transition in vanadium dioxide induced by a terahertz electric field. This is achieved using metamaterial-enhanced picosecond, high-field terahertz pulses to reduce the Coulomb-induced potential barrier for carrier transport. A nonlinear metamaterial response is observed through the phase transition, demonstrating that high-field terahertz pulses provide alternative pathways to induce collective electronic and structural rearrangements. The metamaterial resonators play a dual role, providing sub-wavelength field enhancement that locally drives the nonlinear response, and global sensitivity to the local changes, thereby enabling macroscopic observation of the dynamics. This methodology provides a powerful platform to investigate low-energy dynamics in condensed matter and, further, demonstrates that integration of metamaterials with complex matter is a viable pathway to realize functional nonlinear electromagnetic composites.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Ultra-sensitive vibrational spectroscopy of protein monolayers with plasmonic nanoantenna arrays

Ronen Adato; Ahmet Ali Yanik; Jason J. Amsden; David L. Kaplan; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; Mi K. Hong; Shyamsunder Erramilli; Hatice Altug

Infrared absorption spectroscopy enabling direct access to vibrational fingerprints of the molecular structure is a powerful method for functional studies of bio-molecules. Although the intrinsic absorption cross-sections of IR active modes of proteins are nearly 10 orders of magnitude larger than the corresponding Raman cross-sections, they are still small compared to that of fluorescence-label based methods. Here, we developed a new tool based on collective excitation of plasmonic nanoantenna arrays and demonstrated direct detection of vibrational signatures of single protein monolayers. We first tailored the geometry of individual nanoantennas to form resonant structures that match the molecular vibrational modes. The tailored nanoantennas are then arranged in such a way that their in-phase dipolar coupling leads to a collective excitation of the ensemble with strongly enhanced near fields. The combined collective and individual plasmonic responses of the antenna array play a critical role in attaining signal enhancement factors of 104–105. We achieved measurement of the vibrational spectra of proteins at zeptomole levels for the entire array, corresponding to only 145 molecules per antenna. The near-field nature of the plasmonic enhancement of the absorption signals is demonstrated with progressive loading of the nanoantennas with varying protein film thicknesses. Finally, an advanced model based on nonequilibrium Greens function formalism is introduced, which explains the observed Fano-type absorption line-shapes and tuning of the absorption strengths with the antenna resonance.


Nature Materials | 2010

Waterproof AlInGaP optoelectronics on stretchable substrates with applications in biomedicine and robotics

Rak Hwan Kim; Dae Hyeong Kim; Jianliang Xiao; Bong Hoon Kim; Sang Il Park; Bruce Panilaitis; Roozbeh Ghaffari; Jimin Yao; Ming Li; Zhuangjian Liu; Viktor Malyarchuk; Dae Gon Kim; An Phong Le; Ralph G. Nuzzo; David L. Kaplan; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; Yonggang Huang; Zhan Kang; John A. Rogers

Inorganic light-emitting diodes and photodetectors represent important, established technologies for solid-state lighting, digital imaging and many other applications. Eliminating mechanical and geometrical design constraints imposed by the supporting semiconductor wafers can enable alternative uses in areas such as biomedicine and robotics. Here we describe systems that consist of arrays of interconnected, ultrathin inorganic light-emitting diodes and photodetectors configured in mechanically optimized layouts on unusual substrates. Light-emitting sutures, implantable sheets and illuminated plasmonic crystals that are compatible with complete immersion in biofluids illustrate the suitability of these technologies for use in biomedicine. Waterproof optical-proximity-sensor tapes capable of conformal integration on curved surfaces of gloves and thin, refractive-index monitors wrapped on tubing for intravenous delivery systems demonstrate possibilities in robotics and clinical medicine. These and related systems may create important, unconventional opportunities for optoelectronic devices.


Optics Express | 2008

Over 4000 nm Bandwidth of Mid-IR Supercontinuum Generation in sub-centimeter Segments of Highly Nonlinear Tellurite PCFs

Peter Domachuk; N. A. Wolchover; Mark Cronin-Golomb; A. Wang; A. K. George; C.M.B. Cordeiro; Jonathan C. Knight; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto

We report broad bandwidth, mid-IR supercontinuum generation using a sub-cm (8 mm) length of highly nonlinear tellurite microstructured photonic crystal fiber (PCF). We pump the fiber at telecommunication wavelengths by using 1550 nm, 100 fs pulses of energy E=1.9 nJ. When coupled in the PCF, these pulses result in a supercontinuum (SC) bandwidth of 4080 nm extending from 789 to 4870 nm measured at 20 dBm below the peak spectral power. This bandwidth is comparable or in excess of previously reported spectra for other nonlinear glass fiber formulations despite the significantly shorter fiber length. In addition, besides offering a convenient pump wavelength, short fiber lengths enable smoother SC spectra, lower dispersion, and reduced material absorption at longer wavelengths making the use of this PCF particularly interesting.


Nature Communications | 2012

Graphene-based wireless bacteria detection on tooth enamel

Manu Sebastian Mannoor; Hu Tao; Jefferson D. Clayton; Amartya Sengupta; David L. Kaplan; Rajesh R. Naik; Naveen Verma; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; Michael C. McAlpine

Direct interfacing of nanosensors onto biomaterials could impact health quality monitoring and adaptive threat detection. Graphene is capable of highly sensitive analyte detection due to its nanoscale nature. Here we show that graphene can be printed onto water-soluble silk. This in turn permits intimate biotransfer of graphene nanosensors onto biomaterials, including tooth enamel. The result is a fully biointerfaced sensing platform, which can be tuned to detect target analytes. For example, via self-assembly of antimicrobial peptides onto graphene, we show bioselective detection of bacteria at single-cell levels. Incorporation of a resonant coil eliminates the need for onboard power and external connections. Combining these elements yields two-tiered interfacing of peptide-graphene nanosensors with biomaterials. In particular, we demonstrate integration onto a tooth for remote monitoring of respiration and bacteria detection in saliva. Overall, this strategy of interfacing graphene nanosensors with biomaterials represents a versatile approach for ubiquitous detection of biochemical targets.


Nature | 2003

Transformation and control of ultra-short pulses in dispersion-engineered photonic crystal fibres

W.H. Reeves; Dmitry V. Skryabin; Fabio Biancalana; Jonathan C. Knight; P. St. J. Russell; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; A. Efimov; A. J. Taylor

Photonic crystal fibres (PCFs) offer greatly enhanced design freedom compared to standard optical fibres. For example, they allow precise control of the chromatic dispersion (CD) profile—the frequency dependence of propagation speed—over a broad wavelength range. This permits studies of nonlinear pulse propagation in previously inaccessible parameter regimes. Here we report on spectral broadening of 100-fs pulses in PCFs with anomalously flat CD profiles. Maps of the spectral and spatio-temporal behaviour as a function of power show that dramatic conversion (to both longer and shorter wavelengths) can occur in remarkably short lengths of fibre, depending on the magnitude and shape of the CD profile. Because the PCFs used are single-mode at all wavelengths, the light always emerges in a fundamental guided mode. Excellent agreement is obtained between the experimental results and numerical solutions of the nonlinear wave equation, indicating that the underlying processes can be reliably modelled. These results show how, through appropriate choice of CD, nonlinearities can be efficiently harnessed to generate laser light at new wavelengths.

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Antoinette J. Taylor

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Anatoly Efimov

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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