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Dive into the research topics where Mario Hauser is active.

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Featured researches published by Mario Hauser.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

High-Q conical polymeric microcavities

Tobias Grossmann; Mario Hauser; Torsten Beck; Cristian Gohn-Kreuz; M. Karl; H. Kalt; Christoph Vannahme; Timo Mappes

We report on the fabrication of high-Q microresonators made of low-loss, thermoplastic polymer poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) directly processed on a silicon substrate. Using this polymer-on-silicon material in combination with a thermal reflow step enables cavities of conical geometry with an ultrasmooth surface. The cavity Q factor of these PMMA resonators is above 2×106 in the 1300 nm wavelength range. Finite element simulations show the existence of a variety of “whispering gallery” modes in these resonators explaining the complexity of the measured transmission spectra.


Optics Express | 2011

Direct laser writing for active and passive high-Q polymer microdisks on silicon

Tobias Grossmann; Simone Schleede; Mario Hauser; Torsten Beck; Michael Thiel; Georg von Freymann; Timo Mappes; H. Kalt

We report the fabrication of high-Q polymeric microdisks on silicon via direct laser writing utilizing two-photon absorption induced polymerization. The quality factors of the passive cavities are above 10(6) in the 1300 nm wavelength region. The flexible three-dimensional (3D) lithography method allows for the fabrication of different cavity thicknesses on the same substrate, useful for rapid prototyping of active and passive optical microcavities. Microdisk lasers are realized by doping the resist with dye, resulting in laser emission at visible wavelengths.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Low-threshold conical microcavity dye lasers

Tobias Grossmann; Simone Schleede; Mario Hauser; Mads Bro̸kner Christiansen; Christoph Vannahme; Carsten Eschenbaum; Sönke Klinkhammer; Torsten Beck; Jochen Fuchs; G. Ulrich Nienhaus; Uli Lemmer; Anders Kristensen; Timo Mappes; H. Kalt

We report on lasing in rhodamine 6G-doped, conical polymeric microcavities with high quality factors fabricated on a silicon substrate. Threshold pump energies as low as 3 nJ are achieved by free-space excitation in the quasistationary pumping regime with lasing wavelengths around 600 nm. Finite element simulations confirm that lasing occurs in whispering gallery modes which corresponds well to the measured multimode laser-emission. The effect of dye concentration on lasing threshold and lasing wavelength is investigated and can be explained using a standard dye laser model.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Absolute external luminescence quantum efficiency of zinc oxide

Mario Hauser; Alexander Hepting; R. Hauschild; Huijuan Zhou; Johannes Fallert; H. Kalt; C. Klingshirn

We report on the measurement of the absolute external luminescence quantum efficiency of various ZnO samples using a miniature integrating sphere fitted into a cryostat. Even the absolute luminescence quantum efficiencies per spectral interval are directly accessible. Measurements have been carried out on high quality bulk samples and different commercially available ZnO powders from 8K up to room temperature. Activated processes lead to an overall decrease in the efficiency with temperature. All efficiencies are considerably below unity, making the identification of the luminescence decay time with the radiative life time very questionable.


Optics Express | 2011

Strongly confined, low-threshold laser modes in organic semiconductor microgoblets

Tobias Grossmann; Sönke Klinkhammer; Mario Hauser; Dominik Floess; Torsten Beck; Christoph Vannahme; Timo Mappes; Uli Lemmer; H. Kalt

We investigate lasing from high-Q, polymeric goblet-type microcavities covered by an organic semiconductor gain layer. We analyze the optical modes in the high-Q cavities using finite element simulations and present a numerical method to determine the cutoff thickness of the gain layer above which the whispering gallery modes are strongly confined in this layer. Fabricated devices show reduced lasing thresholds for increasing gain layer thicknesses, which can be explained by a higher filling factor of the optical modes in the gain layer. Furthermore, reduced lasing threshold is accompanied by a red-shift of the laser emission.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

High-Q polymer resonators with spatially controlled photo-functionalization for biosensing applications

Torsten Beck; Martin Mai; Tobias Grossmann; Tobias Wienhold; Mario Hauser; Timo Mappes; H. Kalt

We demonstrate the applicability of polymeric whispering gallery mode resonators fabricated on silicon as biosensors. Optical measurements on the passive resonators in the visible spectral range yield Q-factors as high as 1.3×107. Local, covalent surface functionalization, is achieved by spatially controlled UV-exposure of a derivative of the photoreactive crosslinker benzophenone. Protein detection is shown using the specific binding of the biotin-streptavidin system.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2011

Diode-Pumped Organic Semiconductor Microcone Laser

Sönke Klinkhammer; Tobias Grossmann; Karl Lüll; Mario Hauser; Christoph Vannahme; Timo Mappes; H. Kalt; Uli Lemmer

We report laser action from conical polymeric microcavities. A thin film of the organic semiconductor tris(8-hydroxyquinoline) aluminum (Alq3) doped with the laser dye 4-dicyanmethylene-2-methyl-6-(p-dimethylaminostyryl)-4H-pyran (DCM) on top of the microcones enables low-threshold lasing when pumped with a conventional blu-ray laser diode. This combination might pave the way towards compact, low-cost integrated laser-based sensing systems.


Experimental Cell Research | 2012

Revealing non-genetic adhesive variations in clonal populations by comparative single-cell force spectroscopy.

Lu Dao; Ulrich Weiland; Mario Hauser; Irina Nazarenko; H. Kalt; Martin Bastmeyer; Clemens M. Franz

Cell populations often display heterogeneous behavior, including cell-to-cell variations in morphology, adhesion and spreading. However, better understanding the significance of such cell variations for the function of the population as a whole requires quantitative single-cell assays. To investigate adhesion variability in a CHO cell population in detail, we measured integrin-mediated adhesion to laminin and collagen, two ubiquitous ECM components, by AFM-based single-cell force spectroscopy (SCFS). CHO cells generally adhered more strongly to laminin than collagen but population adhesion force distributions to both ECM components were broad and partially overlapped. To determine the levels of laminin and collagen binding in individual cells directly, we alternatingly measured single cells on adjacent microstripes of collagen and laminin arrayed on the same adhesion substrate. In repeated measurements (≥60) individual cells showed a stable and ECM type-specific adhesion response. All tested cells bound laminin more strongly, but the scale of laminin over collagen binding varied between cells. Together, this demonstrates that adhesion levels to different ECM components are tightly yet differently set in each cell of the population. Adhesion variability to laminin was non-genetic and cell cycle-independent but scaled with the range of α6 integrin expression on the cell surface. Adhesive cell-to-cell variations due to varying receptor expression levels thus appear to be an inherent feature of cell populations and should to be considered when fully characterizing population adhesion. In this approach, SCFS performed on multifunctional adhesion substrates can provide quantitative single-cell information not obtainable from population-averaging measurements on homogeneous adhesion substrates.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2011

PMMA-micro goblet resonators for biosensing applications

Torsten Beck; Mario Hauser; Tobias Grossmann; Dominik Floess; Simone Schleede; Julian Fischer; Christoph Vannahme; Timo Mappes; H. Kalt

We report on a new type of whispering gallery mode (WGM) resonator made of out of low-loss polymer poly (methyl methacrylate) (PMMA). These optical cavities are fabricated using standard semiconductor processing methods in combination with a specific thermal reflow process. During this subsequent thermal treatment, surface tension leads to the goblet like geometry of the resonator and to an ultra smooth surface. The Q-factor of these goblet resonators is above 2·106 in the 1310 nm wavelength range. In order to demonstrate the applicability of the goblet resonators for bio sensing, Bovine Serum Albumin was detected by monitoring the shift of resonator modes due to protein adsorption.


Integrative Biology | 2016

Actomyosin contractility and RhoGTPases affect cell-polarity and directional migration during haptotaxis

Tatjana J. Autenrieth; Stephanie C. Frank; Alexandra M. Greiner; Dominik Klumpp; Benjamin Richter; Mario Hauser; Seong-il Lee; Joel M. Levine; Martin Bastmeyer

Although much is known about chemotaxis- induced by gradients of soluble chemical cues - the molecular mechanisms involved in haptotaxis (migration induced by substrate-bound protein gradients) are largely unknown. We used micropatterning to produce discontinuous gradients consisting of μm-sized fibronectin-dots arranged at constant lateral but continuously decreasing axial spacing. Parameters like gradient slope, protein concentration and size or shape of the fibronectin dots were modified to determine optimal conditions for directional cell migration in gradient patterns. We demonstrate that fibroblasts predominantly migrate uphill towards a higher fibronectin density in gradients with a dot size of 2 × 2 μm, a 2% and 6% slope, and a low fibronectin concentration of 1 μg ml-1. Increasing dot size to 3.5 × 3.5 μm resulted in stationary cells, whereas rectangular dots (2 × 3 μm) orientated perpendicular to the gradient axis preferentially induce lateral migration. During haptotaxis, the Golgi apparatus reorients to a posterior position between the nucleus and the trailing edge. Using pharmacological inhibitors, we demonstrate that actomyosin contractility and microtubule dynamics are a prerequisite for gradient recognition indicating that asymmetric intracellular forces are necessary to read the axis of adhesive gradients. In the haptotaxis signalling cascade, RhoA and Cdc42, and the atypical protein kinase C zeta (aPKCζ), but not Rac, are located upstream of actomyosin contractility.

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H. Kalt

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Tobias Grossmann

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Torsten Beck

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Christoph Vannahme

Technical University of Denmark

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Simone Schleede

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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C. Klingshirn

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Johannes Fallert

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Uli Lemmer

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Huijuan Zhou

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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