Nicholas A. Melosh
Stanford University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nicholas A. Melosh.
Science | 2007
Wanli Yang; Jason D. Fabbri; Trevor M. Willey; J I Lee; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Peter R. Schreiner; Andrey A. Fokin; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Nataliya A. Fokina; W. Meevasana; Norman Mannella; K. Tanaka; X. Zhou; T. van Buuren; Michael A. Kelly; Z. Hussain; Nicholas A. Melosh; Zhi-Xun Shen
We found monochromatic electron photoemission from large-area self-assembled monolayers of a functionalized diamondoid, [121]tetramantane-6-thiol. Photoelectron spectra of the diamondoid monolayers exhibited a peak at the low–kinetic energy threshold; up to 68% of all emitted electrons were emitted within this single energy peak. The intensity of the emission peak is indicative of diamondoids being negative electron affinity materials. With an energy distribution width of less than 0.5 electron volts, this source of monochromatic electrons may find application in technologies such as electron microscopy, electron beam lithography, and field-emission flat-panel displays.
Nano Letters | 2011
Fuming Wang; Nicholas A. Melosh
Conversion of light into direct current is important for applications ranging from energy conversion to photodetection, yet often challenging over broad photon frequencies. Here we show a new architecture based on surface plasmon excitation within a metal-insulator-metal device that produces power based on spatial confinement of electron excitation through plasmon absorption. Plasmons excited in the upper metal are absorbed, creating a high concentration of hot electrons which can inject above or tunnel through the thin insulating barrier, producing current. The theoretical power conversion efficiency enhancement achieved can be almost 40 times larger than that of direct illumination while utilizing a broad spectrum of IR to visible wavelengths. Here we present both theoretical estimates of the power conversion efficiency and experimental device measurements, which show clear rectification and power conversion behavior.
ACS Nano | 2013
Xi Xie; Alexander M. Xu; Sergio Leal-Ortiz; Yuhong Cao; Craig C. Garner; Nicholas A. Melosh
Nondestructive introduction of genes, proteins, and small molecules into mammalian cells with high efficiency is a challenging, yet critical, process. Here we demonstrate a simple nanoelectroporation platform to achieve highly efficient molecular delivery and high transfection yields with excellent uniformity and cell viability. The system is built on alumina nanostraws extending from a track-etched membrane, forming an array of hollow nanowires connected to an underlying microfluidic channel. Cellular engulfment of the nanostraws provides an intimate contact, significantly reducing the necessary electroporation voltage and increasing homogeneity over a large area. Biomolecule delivery is achieved by diffusion through the nanostraws and enhanced by electrophoresis during pulsing. The system was demonstrated to offer excellent spatial, temporal, and dose control for delivery, as well as providing high-yield cotransfection and sequential transfection.
Nano Letters | 2012
Bryan Smith; Paul Kempen; Donna M. Bouley; Alexander M. Xu; Zhuang Liu; Nicholas A. Melosh; Hongjie Dai; Robert Sinclair; Sanjiv S. Gambhir
Delivery is one of the most critical obstacles confronting nanoparticle use in cancer diagnosis and therapy. For most oncological applications, nanoparticles must extravasate in order to reach tumor cells and perform their designated task. However, little understanding exists regarding the effect of nanoparticle shape on extravasation. Herein we use real-time intravital microscopic imaging to meticulously examine how two different nanoparticles behave across three different murine tumor models. The study quantitatively demonstrates that high-aspect ratio single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) display extravasational behavior surprisingly different from, and counterintuitive to, spherical nanoparticles although the nanoparticles have similar surface coatings, area, and charge. This work quantitatively indicates that nanoscale extravasational competence is highly dependent on nanoparticle geometry and is heterogeneous.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Benjamin D. Almquist; Nicholas A. Melosh
Many biomaterials are designed to regulate the interactions between artificial and natural surfaces. However, when materials are inserted through the cell membrane itself the interface formed between the interior edge of the membrane and the material surface is not well understood and poorly controlled. Here we demonstrate that by replicating the nanometer-scale hydrophilic-hydrophobic-hydrophilic architecture of transmembrane proteins, artificial “stealth” probes spontaneously insert and anchor within the lipid bilayer core, forming a high-strength interface. These nanometer-scale hydrophobic bands are readily fabricated on metallic probes by functionalizing the exposed sidewall of an ultrathin evaporated Au metal layer rather than by lithography. Penetration and adhesion forces for butanethiol and dodecanethiol functionalized probes were directly measured using atomic force microscopy (AFM) on thick stacks of lipid bilayers to eliminate substrate effects. The penetration dynamics were starkly different for hydrophobic versus hydrophilic probes. Both 5- and 10 nm thick hydrophobically functionalized probes naturally resided within the lipid core, while hydrophilic probes remained in the aqueous region. Surprisingly, the barrier to probe penetration with short butanethiol chains (Eo,5 nm = 21.8kbT, Eo,10 nm = 15.3kbT) was dramatically higher than longer dodecanethiol chains (Eo,5 nm = 14.0kbT, Eo,10 nm = 10.9kbT), indicating that molecular mobility and orientation also play a role in addition to hydrophobicity in determining interface stability. These results highlight a new strategy for designing artificial cell interfaces that can nondestructively penetrate the lipid bilayer.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2004
R. A. Beckman; Ezekiel Johnston-Halperin; Nicholas A. Melosh; Yi Luo; Jonathan E. Green; James R. Heath
The recent development of the superlattice nanowire pattern transfer technique allows for the fabrication of arrays of nanowires at a diameter, pitch, aspect ratio, and regularity beyond competing approaches. Here, we report the fabrication of conducting Si nanowire arrays with wire widths and pitches of 10–20 and 40–50 nm, respectively, and resistivity values comparable to the bulk through the selection of appropriate silicon-on-insulator substrates, careful reactive-ion etching, and spin-on glass doping. These results promise the realization of interesting nanoelectronic circuits and devices, including chemical and biological sensors, nanoscale mosaics for electronics, and ultradense field-effect transistor arrays.
Nature Communications | 2014
Alexander M. Xu; Amin Aalipour; Sergio Leal-Ortiz; Armen H. Mekhdjian; Xi Xie; Alexander R. Dunn; Craig C. Garner; Nicholas A. Melosh
High-aspect ratio nanostructures such as nanowires and nanotubes are a powerful new tool for accessing the cell interior for delivery and sensing. Controlling and optimizing cellular access is a critical challenge for this new technology, yet even the most basic aspect of this process, whether these structures directly penetrate the cell membrane, is still unknown. Here we report the first quantification of hollow nanowires-nanostraws-that directly penetrate the membrane by observing dynamic ion delivery from each 100-nm diameter nanostraw. We discover that penetration is a rare event: 7.1±2.7% of the nanostraws penetrate the cell to provide cytosolic access for an extended period for an average of 10.7±5.8 penetrations per cell. Using time-resolved delivery, the kinetics of the first penetration event are shown to be adhesion dependent and coincident with recruitment of focal adhesion-associated proteins. These measurements provide a quantitative basis for understanding nanowire-cell interactions, and a means for rapidly assessing membrane penetration.
Biophysical Journal | 2010
Ian Y. Wong; Nicholas A. Melosh
DNA hybridization at surfaces is a crucial process for biomolecular detection, genotyping, and gene expression analysis. However, hybridization density and kinetics can be strongly inhibited by electric fields from the negatively charged DNA as the reaction proceeds. Here, we develop an electrostatic model to optimize hybridization density and kinetics as a function of DNA surface density, salt concentrations, and applied voltages. The electrostatic repulsion from a DNA surface layer is calculated numerically and incorporated into a modified Langmuir scheme, allowing kinetic suppression of hybridization. At the low DNA probe densities typically used in assays (<10(13)/cm(2)), electrostatics effects are largely screened and hybridization is completed with fast kinetics. However, higher hybridization densities can be achieved at intermediate DNA surface densities, albeit with slower kinetics. The application of positive voltages circumvents issues resulting from the very high DNA probe density, allowing highly enhanced hybridization densities and accelerated kinetics, and validating recent experimental measurements.
Nature Communications | 2013
Jared Schwede; Tomas Sarmiento; V.K. Narasimhan; Samuel Rosenthal; Daniel Riley; F. Schmitt; Igor Bargatin; Kunal Sahasrabuddhe; Roger T. Howe; James S. Harris; Nicholas A. Melosh; Zhi-Xun Shen
Photon-enhanced thermionic emission is a method of solar-energy conversion that promises to combine photon and thermal processes into a single mechanism, overcoming fundamental limits on the efficiency of photovoltaic cells. Photon-enhanced thermionic emission relies on vacuum emission of photoexcited electrons that are in thermal equilibrium with a semiconductor lattice, avoiding challenging non-equilibrium requirements and exotic material properties. However, although previous work demonstrated the photon-enhanced thermionic emission effect, efficiency has until now remained very low. Here we describe electron-emission measurements on a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure that introduces an internal interface, decoupling the basic physics of photon-enhanced thermionic emission from the vacuum emission process. Quantum efficiencies are dramatically higher than in previous experiments because of low interface recombination and are projected to increase another order of magnitude with more stable, low work-function coatings. The results highlight the effectiveness of the photon-enhanced thermionic emission process and demonstrate that efficient photon-enhanced thermionic emission is achievable, a key step towards realistic photon-enhanced thermionic emission based energy conversion.
Applied Physics Letters | 2012
J I Lee; Igor Bargatin; Nicholas A. Melosh; Roger T. Howe
In this letter, we calculate numerically the emitter-collector gaps that maximize the power conversion efficiency of vacuum thermionic energy converters (TECs). The optimum arises because efficiency drops both at very large gaps, due to space-charge limitations on the TEC current, and at very small gaps, due to the increased parasitic heat loss via near-field radiative heat transfer. For typical TECs made with cesiated tungsten electrodes, the optimal gaps range from 900 nm to 3 μm and are approximately equal to the characteristic wavelength of the emitter thermal radiation, as given by Wien’s displacement law.