Himali D. Jayathilake
Wayne State University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Himali D. Jayathilake.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Igor V. Stiopkin; Himali D. Jayathilake; and Andrey N. Bordenyuk; Alexander V. Benderskii
We present a new technique of broad-band heterodyne-detected sum frequency generation (HD-SFG) spectroscopy and demonstrate its high sensitivity allowing surface-selective measurements of vibrational spectra at submonolayer surface coverage, as low as a few percent of a monolayer. This was achieved without the help of surface enhancement phenomena, on a transparent dielectric substrate (water), and without introducing fluorescent labels, in fact, without utilizing any electronic resonances. Only the intrinsic vibrational transitions were employed for the detection of the analyte molecules (1-octanol). Unlike conventional (homodyne-detected) SFG spectroscopy, where the signal intensity decreases quadratically with decreasing surface coverage, in HD-SFG, the scaling is linear, and the signal is amplified by interference with a reference beam, significantly improving sensitivity and detection limits. At the same time, HD-SFG provides the phase as well as the amplitude of the signal and thus allows accurate subtraction of the non-resonant background--a common problem for surfaces with low concentrations of analyte molecules (i.e., weak resonant signals).
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2010
Igor V. Stiopkin; Himali D. Jayathilake; Champika N. Weeraman; Alexander V. Benderskii
Sum frequency generation (SFG) is a surface-selective spectroscopy that provides a wealth of molecular-level information on the structure and dynamics at surfaces and interfaces. This paper addresses the general issue of spectral resolution and sensitivity of the broad-band (BB) SFG that involves a spectrally narrow nonresonant (usually visible) and a BB resonant (usually infrared) laser pulses. We examine how the spectral width and temporal shape of the two pulses, and the time delay between them, relate to the spectroscopic line shape and signal level in the BB-SFG measurement. By combining experimental and model calculations, we show that the best spectral resolution and highest signal level are simultaneously achieved when the nonresonant narrow-band upconversion pulse arrives with a nonzero time delay after the resonant BB pulse. The nonzero time delay partially avoids the linear trade-off of improving spectral resolution at the expense of decreasing signal intensity, which is common in BB-SFG schemes utilizing spectral filtering to produce narrow-band visible pulses.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006
Himali D. Jayathilake; Min Hua Zhu; Charles Rosenblatt; Andrey N. Bordenyuk; Champika N. Weeraman; Alexander V. Benderskii
Molecular organization at polyimide surfaces used as alignment layers in liquid crystal displays was investigated using vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy. We focus on the orientation of the long alkyl side groups at the polymer surface using polarization-selected SFG spectra of the CH(3)- and CH(2)-stretch modes of the side chain. Mechanical rubbing and baking, an accepted industrial procedure used to produce pretilt of the liquid crystal, was found to induce pronounced azimuthal anisotropy in the orientational distribution of the alkyl side chains. Orientational analysis of the SFG vibrational spectra in terms of the azimuthal and tilt angles (in and out of plane, respectively) of the alkyl side chains shows their preferential tilt along the rubbing direction, with the azimuthal distribution narrower for stronger rubbed polymer samples.
Langmuir | 2009
Himali D. Jayathilake; Jeffery A. Driscoll; Andrey N. Bordenyuk; Libo Wu; Sandro R. P. da Rocha; Cláudio N. Verani; Alexander V. Benderskii
Molecular organization of Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) monolayers of novel copper-containing metal-ligand surfactants was characterized by the surface-selective vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy. The orientational and conformational order inferred from the SFG peak amplitudes and line shapes were correlated with the two-dimensional phases of the monolayers observed in the compression isotherms. The octadecyl-pyridin-2-ylmethyl-amine (L(PyC18)) ligand by itself shows good amphiphilic properties, as indicated by the high monolayer collapse pressure at the air/water interface, but its LB films transferred onto fused silica exhibit a high degree of trans-gauche conformational disorder in the alkyl tails. Coordination of copper(II) ions to the chelating head group enhances the molecular alignment and reduces the fraction of gauche defects of the alkyl chains. Monolayers of single-tail (L(PyC18)Cu(II)Cl(2)) and double-tail [(L(PyC18))(2)Cu(II)]Cl(2) metallosurfactants show distinctly different behavior of their molecular organization as a function of the area per molecule. Our observations suggest metal-ligand interactions as a pathway to induce molecular order in LB monolayer films.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2005
Andrey N. Bordenyuk; Himali D. Jayathilake; Alexander V. Benderskii
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2007
Andrey N. Bordenyuk; Champika N. Weeraman; Achani K. Yatawara; Himali D. Jayathilake; Igor V. Stiopkin; Yi Liu; Alexander V. Benderskii
Archive | 2008
Alexander V. Benderskii; Igor V. Stiopkin; Himali D. Jayathilake
Archive | 2008
Himali D. Jayathilake; Igor V. Stiopkin; Champika N. Weeraman; Achani K. Yatawara; Alexander V. Benderskii
Archive | 2008
Champika N. Weeraman; Igor V. Stiopkin; Himali D. Jayathilake; Alexander V. Benderskii
Archive | 2008
Igor V. Stiopkin; Achani K. Yatawara; Himali D. Jayathilake; Champika N. Weeraman; Alexander V. Benderskii