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Dive into the research topics where Hanna Cho is active.

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Featured researches published by Hanna Cho.


Nano Letters | 2010

Tunable, Broadband Nonlinear Nanomechanical Resonator

Hanna Cho; Min Feng Yu; Alexander F. Vakakis; Lawrence A. Bergman; D. Michael McFarland

A nanomechanical resonator incorporating intrinsically geometric nonlinearity and operated in a highly nonlinear regime is modeled and developed. The nanoresonator is capable of extreme broadband resonance, with tunable resonance bandwidth up to many times its natural frequency. Its resonance bandwidth and drop frequency (the upper jump-down frequency) are found to be very sensitive to added mass and energy dissipation due to damping. We demonstrate a prototype nonlinear mechanical nanoresonator integrating a doubly clamped carbon nanotube and show its broadband resonance over tens of MHz (over 3 times its natural resonance frequency) and its sensitivity to femtogram added mass at room temperature.


ACS Nano | 2007

Individual nanotube-based needle nanoprobes for electrochemical studies in picoliter microenvironments.

Kyungsuk Yum; Hanna Cho; Jie Hu; Min Feng Yu

We report the fabrication and characterization of individual nanotube-based, long and straight needle nanoprobes for electrochemistry and the study of their applicability and behavior in microenvironments. The needle nanoprobe, with a nanoscale ring-shaped Au electrode at the tip of the needle serving as the active electrode, was characterized by electrochemical current measurement and cyclic voltammetry and analyzed with electrochemical models. Such a needle nanoprobe, in combination with another metal-coated nanowire as a reference electrode, was further used, for the first time, for local electrochemical sensing inside microdroplets having volumes down to a few picoliters. We explain the acquired voltammetric behaviors of redox-active molecules in confined microscale environments and reveal a unique electrochemical mechanism which allows the regeneration of the redox-active molecules and the establishment of a stable reference potential in the microenvironments.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Atomic force microscope infrared spectroscopy on 15 nm scale polymer nanostructures

Jonathan R. Felts; Hanna Cho; Min Feng Yu; Lawrence A. Bergman; Alexander F. Vakakis; William P. King

We measure the infrared spectra of polyethylene nanostructures of height 15 nm using atomic force microscope infrared spectroscopy (AFM-IR), which is about an order of magnitude improvement over state of the art. In AFM-IR, infrared light incident upon a sample induces photothermal expansion, which is measured by an AFM tip. The thermomechanical response of the sample-tip-cantilever system results in cantilever vibrations that vary in time and frequency. A time-frequency domain analysis of the cantilever vibration signal reveals how sample thermomechanical response and cantilever dynamics affect the AFM-IR signal. By appropriately filtering the cantilever vibration signal in both the time domain and the frequency domain, it is possible to measure infrared absorption spectra on polyethylene nanostructures as small as 15 nm.


ACS Nano | 2013

Modeling and measurement of geometrically nonlinear damping in a microcantilever-nanotube system.

Bongwon Jeong; Hanna Cho; Min Feng Yu; Alexander F. Vakakis; D. M. McFarland; Lawrence A. Bergman

Nonlinear mechanical systems promise broadband resonance and instantaneous hysteretic switching that can be used for high sensitivity sensing. However, to introduce nonlinear resonances in widely used microcantilever systems, such as AFM probes, requires driving the cantilever to an amplitude that is too large for any practical applications. We introduce a novel design for a microcantilever with a strong nonlinearity at small cantilever oscillation amplitude arising from the geometrical integration of a single BN nanotube. The dynamics of the system was modeled theoretically and confirmed experimentally. The system, besides providing a practical design of a nonlinear microcantilever-based probe, demonstrates also an effective method of studying the nonlinear damping properties of the attached nanotube. Beyond the typical linear mechanical damping, the nonlinear damping contribution from the attached nanotube was found to be essential for understanding the dynamical behavior of the designed system. Experimental results obtained through laser microvibrometry validated the developed model incorporating the nonlinear damping contribution.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2014

High-frequency thermal-electrical cycles for pyroelectric energy conversion

Bikram Bhatia; Anoop R. Damodaran; Hanna Cho; Lane W. Martin; William P. King

We report thermal to electrical energy conversion from a 150 nm thick BaTiO3 film using pyroelectric cycles at 1 kHz. A microfabricated platform enables temperature and electric field control with temporal resolution near 1 μs. The rapid electric field changes as high as 11 × 105 kV/cm-s, and temperature change rates as high as 6 × 105 K/s allow exploration of pyroelectric cycles in a previously unexplored operating regime. We investigated the effect of phase difference between electric field and temperature cycles, and electric field and temperature change rates on the electrical energy generated from thermal-electrical cycles based on the pyroelectric Ericsson cycle. Complete thermodynamic cycles are possible up to the highest cycle rates tested here, and the energy density varies significantly with phase shifts between temperature and electric field waveforms. This work could facilitate the design and operation of pyroelectric cycles at high cycle rates, and aid in the design of new pyroelectric systems.


Nanotechnology | 2013

Improved atomic force microscope infrared spectroscopy for rapid nanometer-scale chemical identification

Hanna Cho; Jonathan R. Felts; Min Feng Yu; Lawrence A. Bergman; Alexander F. Vakakis; William P. King

Atomic force microscope infrared spectroscopy (AFM-IR) can perform IR spectroscopic chemical identification with sub-100 nm spatial resolution, but is relatively slow due to its low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). In AFM-IR, tunable IR laser light is incident upon a sample, which results in a rise in temperature and thermomechanical expansion of the sample. An AFM tip in contact with the sample senses this nanometer-scale photothermal expansion. The tip motion induces cantilever vibrations, which are measured either in terms of the peak-to-peak amplitude of time-domain data or the integrated magnitude of frequency-domain data. Using a continuous Morlet wavelet transform to the cantilever dynamic response, we show that the cantilever dynamics during AFM-IR vary as a function of both time and frequency. Based on the observed cantilever response, we tailor a time-frequency-domain filter to identify the region of highest vibrational energy. This approach can increase the SNR of the AFM cantilever signal, such that the throughput is increased 32-fold compared to state-of-the art procedures. We further demonstrate significant increases in AFM-IR imaging speed and chemical identification of nanometer-scale domains in polymer films.


Nanotechnology | 2014

Silicon nano-mechanical resonators fabricated by using tip-based nanofabrication

Huan Hu; Hanna Cho; Suhas Somnath; Alexander F. Vakakis; William P. King

We report fabrication of silicon nano-mechanical resonators where the key nanolithography step is performed by using tip-based nanofabrication (TBN). Specifically, a heated atomic force microscope tip deposited polystyrene nanowires that were used together with a lithographically patterned aluminum to serve as an etch mask for silicon resonators their anchors. Using this nanofabrication technique, we demonstrate the fabrication of different types of silicon nano-mechanical resonator devices, including those that are either singly or doubly clamped and having either straight or curvilinear features. Typical dimensions for the width and thickness of these devices is in the range of several hundred nanometers. We characterized the mechanical resonance properties of these devices by using laser Doppler vibrometry and compared the measured response with finite element simulations. Typical resonance frequency values ranged from 1 to 3 MHz and typical quality factor values ranged from 100 to 150. The combination of TBN along with conventional microfabrication processes could help to realize new types of nano-devices.


Nanotechnology | 2016

Utilizing intentional internal resonance to achieve multi-harmonic atomic force microscopy

Bongwon Jeong; Chris Pettit; Sajith Dharmasena; Hohyun Keum; Joohyung Lee; Jungkyu Kim; Seok Kim; D. Michael McFarland; Lawrence A. Bergman; Alexander F. Vakakis; Hanna Cho

During dynamic atomic force microscopy (AFM), the deflection of a scanning cantilever generates multiple frequency terms due to the nonlinear nature of AFM tip-sample interactions. Even though each frequency term is reasonably expected to encode information about the sample, only the fundamental frequency term is typically decoded to provide topographic mapping of the measured surface. One of main reasons for discarding higher harmonic signals is their low signal-to-noise ratio. Here, we introduce a new design concept for multi-harmonic AFM, exploiting intentional nonlinear internal resonance for the enhancement of higher harmonics. The nonlinear internal resonance, triggered by the non-smooth tip-sample dynamic interactions, results in nonlinear energy transfers from the directly excited fundamental bending mode to the higher-frequency mode and, hence, enhancement of the higher harmonic of the measured response. It is verified through detailed theoretical and experimental study that this AFM design can robustly incorporate the required internal resonance and enable high-frequency AFM measurements. Measurements on an inhomogeneous polymer specimen demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed design, namely that the higher harmonic of the measured response is capable of enhanced simultaneous topography imaging and compositional mapping, exhibiting less crosstalk with an abrupt height change.


Nanoscale and Microscale Thermophysical Engineering | 2016

High Power Density Pyroelectric Energy Conversion in Nanometer-Thick BaTiO3 Films

Bikram Bhatia; Hanna Cho; J. Karthik; Jangho Choi; David G. Cahill; Lane W. Martin; William P. King

ABSTRACT Solid-state pyroelectric nanomaterials can be used for thermal-to-electrical energy conversion in the presence of temperature fluctuations. This article reports investigation of energy conversion in a 200 nm thick BaTiO3 film using the pyroelectric Ericsson cycle at cycle frequencies up to 3 kHz. The high cycle frequencies were achieved due to the low thermal mass of the nanometer-scale film, unlike previous studies in which the electrical power output was limited by the rate of heat transfer through the pyroelectric material. A microfabricated platform that allowed precise thermal and electrical cycling enabled us to study the effect of electric field range, temperature oscillation amplitude, and cycle frequency on the electrical power output from pyroelectric Ericsson cycles. We measured a maximum power density of 30 W/cm3 for a temperature range 20–120°C and electric field range 100–125 kV/cm, which represents a significant improvement over past work on pyroelectric cycles. The approach presented in this article could lead to high-power waste heat harvesting in systems with high-frequency temperature oscillations.


international conference on micro electro mechanical systems | 2015

Microcantilever system incorporating internal resonance for multi-harmonic atomic force microscopy

Chris Pettit; Bongwon Jeong; Hohyun Keum; Joohyung Lee; Jungkyu Kim; Seok Kim; D. M. McFarland; Lawreence A. Bergman; Alexander F. Vakakis; Hanna Cho

We report a new design concept of micromechanical cantilever system incorporating the 1:3 internal resonance during dynamic mode operation of atomic force microscopy (AFM). The passive amplification of third harmonic triggered through the mechanism of 1;3 internal resonance enables AFM to utilize multiple harmonics in an air environment. Detailed theoretical and experimental studies of the proposed design demonstrate that the multi-harmonic AFM (MH-AFM) is capable of simultaneous topography imaging and compositional mapping with more than 10-fold enhanced sensitivity.

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Bikram Bhatia

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Junghoon Yeom

Michigan State University

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Lane W. Martin

University of California

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Snehan Peshin

Michigan State University

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