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Dive into the research topics where Laurent D. Menard is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurent D. Menard.


Nano Letters | 2011

Fabrication of Sub-5 nm Nanochannels in Insulating Substrates Using Focused Ion Beam Milling

Laurent D. Menard; J. Michael Ramsey

The use of focused ion beam (FIB) milling to fabricate nanochannels with critical dimensions extending below 5 nm is described. FIB milled lines have narrowing widths as they are milled deeper into a substrate. This focusing characteristic is coupled with a two-layered architecture consisting of a relatively thick (>100 nm) metal film deposited onto a substrate. A channel is milled through the metal layer until it penetrates a prescribed depth into the substrate material. The metal is then removed, leaving a nanochannel with smooth surfaces and lateral dimensions as small as sub-5 nm. These open nanochannels can be sealed with a cover plate and the resulting devices are well-suited for single-molecule DNA transport studies. This methodology is used with quartz, single-crystal silicon, and polydimethylsiloxane substrates to demonstrate its general utility.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Electrokinetically-driven transport of DNA through focused ion beam milled nanofluidic channels.

Laurent D. Menard; J. Michael Ramsey

The electrophoretically driven transport of double-stranded λ-phage DNA through focused ion beam (FIB) milled nanochannels is described. Nanochannels were fabricated having critical dimensions (width and depth) corresponding to 0.5×, 1×, and 2× the DNA persistence length, or 25 nm, 50 nm, and 100 nm, respectively. The threshold field strength required to drive transport, the threading mobility, and the transport mobility were measured as a function of nanochannel size. As the nanochannel dimensions decreased, the entropic barrier to translocation increased and transport became more constrained. Equilibrium models of confinement provide a framework in which to understand the observed trends, although the dynamic nature of the experiments resulted in significant deviations from theory. It was also demonstrated that the use of dynamic wall coatings for the purpose of electroosmotic flow suppression can have a significant impact on transport dynamics that may obfuscate entropic contributions. The nonintermittent DNA transport through the FIB milled nanochannels demonstrates that they are well suited for use in nanofluidic devices. We expect that an understanding of the dynamic transport properties reported here will facilitate the incorporation of FIB-milled nanochannels in devices for single molecule and ensemble analyses.


ACS Nano | 2012

A Device for Performing Lateral Conductance Measurements on Individual Double-Stranded DNA Molecules

Laurent D. Menard; Chad E. Mair; Michael E. Woodson; Jean Pierre Alarie; J. Michael Ramsey

A nanofluidic device is described that is capable of electrically monitoring the driven translocation of DNA molecules through a nanochannel. This is achieved by intersecting a long transport channel with a shorter orthogonal nanochannel. The ionic conductance of this transverse nanochannel is monitored while DNA is electrokinetically driven through the transport channel. When DNA passes the intersection, the transverse conductance is altered, resulting in a transient current response. In 1 M KCl solutions, this was found to be a current enhancement of 5-25%, relative to the baseline transverse ionic current. Two different device geometries were investigated. In one device, the DNA was detected after it was fully inserted into and translocating through the transport nanochannel. In the other device, the DNA was detected while it was in the process of entering the nanochannel. It was found that these two conditions are characterized by different transport dynamics. Simultaneous optical and electrical monitoring of DNA translocation confirmed that the transient events originated from DNA transport through the nanochannel intersection.


Nature Communications | 2017

Enhanced nanochannel translocation and localization of genomic DNA molecules using three-dimensional nanofunnels

Jinsheng Zhou; Yanqian Wang; Laurent D. Menard; Sergey Panyukov; Michael Rubinstein; J. Michael Ramsey

The ability to precisely control the transport of single DNA molecules through a nanoscale channel is critical to DNA sequencing and mapping technologies that are currently under development. Here we show how the electrokinetically driven introduction of DNA molecules into a nanochannel is facilitated by incorporating a three-dimensional nanofunnel at the nanochannel entrance. Individual DNA molecules are imaged as they attempt to overcome the entropic barrier to nanochannel entry through nanofunnels with various shapes. Theoretical modeling of this behavior reveals the pushing and pulling forces that result in up to a 30-fold reduction in the threshold electric field needed to initiate nanochannel entry. In some cases, DNA molecules are stably trapped and axially positioned within a nanofunnel at sub-threshold electric field strengths, suggesting the utility of nanofunnels as force spectroscopy tools. These applications illustrate the benefit of finely tuning nanoscale conduit geometries, which can be designed using the theoretical model developed here.Forcing a DNA molecule into a nanoscale channel requires overcoming the free energy barrier associated with confinement. Here, the authors show that DNA injected through a funnel-shaped entrance more efficiently enters the nanochannel, thanks to facilitating forces generated by the nanofunnel geometry.


Nano Letters | 2013

Polaronic Transport and Current Blockades in Epitaxial Silicide Nanowires and Nanowire Arrays

Violeta Iancu; X.-G. Zhang; Tae-Hwan Kim; Laurent D. Menard; Paul R. C. Kent; Michael E. Woodson; J. Michael Ramsey; An-Ping Li; Hanno H. Weitering

Crystalline micrometer-long YSi2 nanowires with cross sections as small as 1 × 0.5 nm(2) can be grown on the Si(001) surface. Their extreme aspect ratios make electron conduction within these nanowires almost ideally one-dimensional, while their compatibility with the silicon platform suggests application as metallic interconnect in Si-based nanoelectronic devices. Here we combine bottom-up epitaxial wire synthesis in ultrahigh vacuum with top-down miniaturization of the electrical measurement probes to elucidate the electronic conduction mechanism of both individual wires and arrays of nanowires. Temperature-dependent transport through individual nanowires is indicative of thermally assisted tunneling of small polarons between atomic-scale defect centers. In-depth analysis of complex wire networks emphasize significant electronic crosstalk between the nanowires due to the long-range Coulomb fields associated with polaronic charge fluctuations. This work establishes a semiquantitative correlation between the density and distributions of atomic-scale defects and resulting current-voltage characteristics of nanoscale network devices.


Archive | 2014

NANOFLUIDIC DEVICES WITH INTEGRATED COMPONENTS FOR THE CONTROLLED CAPTURE, TRAPPING, AND TRANSPORT OF MACROMOLECULES AND RELATED METHODS OF ANALYSIS

John Michael Ramsey; Laurent D. Menard


Archive | 2011

Methods, systems and devices for forming nanochannels

John Michael Ramsey; Laurent D. Menard; Valeri Gorbounov


Archive | 2013

DEVICES WITH FLUIDIC NANOFUNNELS, ASSOCIATED METHODS, FABRICATION AND ANALYSIS SYSTEMS

John Michael Ramsey; Laurent D. Menard; Jinsheng Zhou; Michael Rubinstein; Sergey Panyukov


Archive | 2014

Nanofluidic devices for the rapid mapping of whole genomes and related systems and methods of analysis

John Michael Ramsey; Laurent D. Menard


Archive | 2012

Devices with a fluid transport nanochannel intersected by a fluid sensing nanochannel and related methods

John Michael Ramsey; Jean Pierre Alarie; Laurent D. Menard

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J. Michael Ramsey

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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John Michael Ramsey

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jean Pierre Alarie

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Michael E. Woodson

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Chad E. Mair

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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April L R Holland

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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J. Zhou

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jinsheng Zhou

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Michael Rubinstein

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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An-Ping Li

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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