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Dive into the research topics where Paul S. Weiss is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul S. Weiss.


Science | 2001

Molecular ruler for scaling down nanostructures

Paul S. Weiss; Anat Hatzor

We show that a relatively simple approach for controlling the colloidal synthesis of anisotropic cadmium selenide semiconductor nanorods can be extended to the size-controlled preparation of magnetic cobalt nanorods as well as spherically shaped nanocrystals. This approach helps define a minimum feature set needed to separately control the sizes and shapes of nanocrystals. The resulting cobalt nanocrystals produce interesting two- and three-dimensional superstructures, including ribbons of nanorods.


Stroke | 2005

Acute stroke care in the US: results from 4 pilot prototypes of the Paul Coverdell National Acute Stroke Registry.

Mat Reeves; S. Arora; Joseph P. Broderick; Michael R. Frankel; J. P. Heinrich; Susan Hickenbottom; Karp H; Kenneth A. LaBresh; Ann Malarcher; George A. Mensah; C. J. Moomaw; Lee H. Schwamm; Paul S. Weiss

Background and Purpose— The Paul Coverdell National Acute Stroke Registry is being developed to improve the quality of acute stroke care. This article describes key features of acute stroke care from 4 prototype registries in Georgia (Ga), Massachusetts (Mass), Michigan (Mich), and Ohio. Methods— Each prototype developed its own sampling scheme to obtain a representative sample of hospitals. Acute stroke admissions were identified using prospective (Mass, Mich) or retrospective (Ga, Ohio) methods. All prototypes used a common set of case definitions and data elements. Weighted site-specific frequencies were generated for each outcome. Results— A total of 6867 admissions from 98 hospitals were included; the majority were ischemic strokes (range, 52% to 70%) with transient ischemic attack and intracerebral hemorrhage comprising the bulk of the remainder. Between 19% and 26% of admissions were younger than age 60 years, and between 52% and 58% were female. Black subjects varied from 7.1% (Mich) to 30.6% (Ga). Between 20% and 25% of admissions arrived at the emergency department within 3 hours of onset. Treatment with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA) was administered to between 3.0% (Ga) and 8.5% (Mass) of ischemic stroke admissions. Of 118 subjects treated with intravenous rtPA, <20% received it within 60 minutes of arrival. Compliance with secondary prevention practices was poorest for smoking cessation counseling and best for antithrombotics. Conclusions— A minority of acute stroke patients are treated according to established guidelines. Quality improvement interventions, targeted primarily at the health care systems level, are needed to improve acute stroke care in the United States.


ACS Nano | 2009

Cluster-Assembled Materials

Shelley A. Claridge; A. W. Castleman; Shiv N. Khanna; Christopher B. Murray; Ayusman Sen; Paul S. Weiss

Cluster-assembled materials offer the ability to tune component properties, lattice parameters, and thus coupling of physical properties through the careful selection and assembly of building blocks. Multi-atom clusters have been found to exhibit physical properties beyond those available from the standard elements in the periodic table; classification of the properties of such clusters effectively enables expansion of the periodic table to a third dimension. Using clusters as superatomic building blocks for hierarchically assembled materials allows these properties to be incorporated into designer materials with tailored properties. Cluster-assembled materials are currently being explored and methods developed to control their design and function. Here, we discuss examples of building block syntheses, assembly strategies, and property control achieved to date.


ACS Nano | 2012

Visibly transparent polymer solar cells produced by solution processing.

Chun-Chao Chen; Letian Dou; Rui Zhu; Choong-Heui Chung; Tze-Bin Song; Yuebing Zheng; Steve Hawks; Gang Li; Paul S. Weiss; Yang Yang

Visibly transparent photovoltaic devices can open photovoltaic applications in many areas, such as building-integrated photovoltaics or integrated photovoltaic chargers for portable electronics. We demonstrate high-performance, visibly transparent polymer solar cells fabricated via solution processing. The photoactive layer of these visibly transparent polymer solar cells harvests solar energy from the near-infrared region while being less sensitive to visible photons. The top transparent electrode employs a highly transparent silver nanowire-metal oxide composite conducting film, which is coated through mild solution processes. With this combination, we have achieved 4% power-conversion efficiency for solution-processed and visibly transparent polymer solar cells. The optimized devices have a maximum transparency of 66% at 550 nm.


ACS Nano | 2011

Fused Silver Nanowires with Metal Oxide Nanoparticles and Organic Polymers for Highly Transparent Conductors

Rui Zhu; Choong-Heui Chung; Kitty C. Cha; Wenbing Yang; Yuebing Zheng; Huanping Zhou; Tze-Bin Song; Chun-Chao Chen; Paul S. Weiss; Gang Li; Yang Yang

Silver nanowire (AgNW) networks are promising candidates to replace indium-tin-oxide (ITO) as transparent conductors. However, complicated treatments are often required to fuse crossed AgNWs to achieve low resistance and good substrate adhesion. In this work, we demonstrate a simple and effective solution method to achieve highly conductive AgNW composite films with excellent optical transparency and mechanical properties. These properties are achieved via sequentially applying TiO(2) sol-gel and PEDOT:PSS solution to treat the AgNW film. TiO(2) solution volume shrinkage and the capillary force induced by solvent evaporation result in tighter contact between crossed AgNWs and improved film conductivity. The PEDOT:PSS coating acts as a protecting layer to achieve strong adhesion. Organic photovoltaic devices based on the AgNW-TiO(2)-PEDOT:PSS transparent conductor have shown comparable performance to those based on commercial ITO substrates.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Viologen-Mediated Assembly of and Sensing with Carboxylatopillar[5]arene-Modified Gold Nanoparticles

Hui Li; Dai-Xiong Chen; Yu-Long Sun; Yuebing Zheng; Li-Li Tan; Paul S. Weiss; Ying-Wei Yang

Carboxylatopillar[5]arene (CP[5]A), a new water-soluble macrocyclic synthetic receptor, has been employed as a stabilizing ligand for in situ preparation of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) to gain new insights into supramolecular host-AuNP interactions. CP[5]A-modified AuNPs with good dispersion and narrow size distributions (3.1 ± 0.5 nm) were successfully produced in aqueous solution, suggesting a green synthetic pathway for the application of AuNPs in biological systems. Supramolecular self-assembly of CP[5]A-modified AuNPs mediated by suitable guest molecules was also investigated, indicating that the new hybrid material is useful for sensing and detection of the herbicide paraquat.


ACS Nano | 2013

Nanotools for neuroscience and brain activity mapping.

A. Paul Alivisatos; Anne M. Andrews; Edward S. Boyden; Miyoung Chun; George M. Church; Karl Deisseroth; John P. Donoghue; Scott E. Fraser; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; Loren L. Looger; Sotiris C. Masmanidis; Paul L. McEuen; A. V. Nurmikko; Hongkun Park; Darcy S. Peterka; Clay Reid; Michael L. Roukes; Axel Scherer; Mark J. Schnitzer; Terrence J. Sejnowski; Kenneth L. Shepard; Doris Tsao; Gina G. Turrigiano; Paul S. Weiss; Chris Xu; Rafael Yuste; Xiaowei Zhuang

Neuroscience is at a crossroads. Great effort is being invested into deciphering specific neural interactions and circuits. At the same time, there exist few general theories or principles that explain brain function. We attribute this disparity, in part, to limitations in current methodologies. Traditional neurophysiological approaches record the activities of one neuron or a few neurons at a time. Neurochemical approaches focus on single neurotransmitters. Yet, there is an increasing realization that neural circuits operate at emergent levels, where the interactions between hundreds or thousands of neurons, utilizing multiple chemical transmitters, generate functional states. Brains function at the nanoscale, so tools to study brains must ultimately operate at this scale, as well. Nanoscience and nanotechnology are poised to provide a rich toolkit of novel methods to explore brain function by enabling simultaneous measurement and manipulation of activity of thousands or even millions of neurons. We and others refer to this goal as the Brain Activity Mapping Project. In this Nano Focus, we discuss how recent developments in nanoscale analysis tools and in the design and synthesis of nanomaterials have generated optical, electrical, and chemical methods that can readily be adapted for use in neuroscience. These approaches represent exciting areas of technical development and research. Moreover, unique opportunities exist for nanoscientists, nanotechnologists, and other physical scientists and engineers to contribute to tackling the challenging problems involved in understanding the fundamentals of brain function.


ACS Nano | 2009

A Mechanical Actuator Driven Electrochemically by Artificial Molecular Muscles

Bala Krishna Juluri; Ajeet S. Kumar; Yi Liu; Tao Ye; Ying-Wei Yang; Amar H. Flood; Lei Fang; J. Fraser Stoddart; Paul S. Weiss; Tony Jun Huang

A microcantilever, coated with a monolayer of redox-controllable, bistable [3]rotaxane molecules (artificial molecular muscles), undergoes reversible deflections when subjected to alternating oxidizing and reducing electrochemical potentials. The microcantilever devices were prepared by precoating one surface with a gold film and allowing the palindromic [3]rotaxane molecules to adsorb selectively onto one side of the microcantilevers, utilizing thiol-gold chemistry. An electrochemical cell was employed in the experiments, and deflections were monitored both as a function of (i) the scan rate (< or =20 mV s(-1)) and (ii) the time for potential step experiments at oxidizing (>+0.4 V) and reducing (<+0.2 V) potentials. The different directions and magnitudes of the deflections for the microcantilevers, which were coated with artificial molecular muscles, were compared with (i) data from nominally bare microcantilevers precoated with gold and (ii) those coated with two types of control compounds, namely, dumbbell molecules to simulate the redox activity of the palindromic bistable [3]rotaxane molecules and inactive 1-dodecanethiol molecules. The comparisons demonstrate that the artificial molecular muscles are responsible for the deflections, which can be repeated over many cycles. The microcantilevers deflect in one direction following oxidation and in the opposite direction upon reduction. The approximately 550 nm deflections were calculated to be commensurate with forces per molecule of approximately 650 pN. The thermal relaxation that characterizes the devices deflection is consistent with the double bistability associated with the palindromic [3]rotaxane and reflects a metastable contracted state. The use of the cooperative forces generated by these self-assembled, nanometer-scale artificial molecular muscles that are electrically wired to an external power supply constitutes a seminal step toward molecular-machine-based nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS).


ACS Nano | 2015

Controlling Motion at the Nanoscale: Rise of the Molecular Machines

John M. Abendroth; Oleksandr S. Bushuyev; Paul S. Weiss; Christopher J. Barrett

As our understanding and control of intra- and intermolecular interactions evolve, ever more complex molecular systems are synthesized and assembled that are capable of performing work or completing sophisticated tasks at the molecular scale. Commonly referred to as molecular machines, these dynamic systems comprise an astonishingly diverse class of motifs and are designed to respond to a plethora of actuation stimuli. In this Review, we outline the conditions that distinguish simple switches and rotors from machines and draw from a variety of fields to highlight some of the most exciting recent examples of opportunities for driven molecular mechanics. Emphasis is placed on the need for controllable and hierarchical assembly of these molecular components to display measurable effects at the micro-, meso-, and macroscales. As in Nature, this strategy will lead to dramatic amplification of the work performed via the collective action of many machines organized in linear chains, on functionalized surfaces, or in three-dimensional assemblies.


ACS Nano | 2012

The State of Nanoparticle-Based Nanoscience and Biotechnology: Progress, Promises, and Challenges

Beatriz Pelaz; Sarah Jaber; Dorleta Jimenez de Aberasturi; Verena Wulf; Takuzo Aida; Jesús M. de la Fuente; Jochen Feldmann; Hermann E. Gaub; Lee Josephson; Cherie R. Kagan; Nicholas A. Kotov; Luis M. Liz-Marzán; Hedi Mattoussi; Paul Mulvaney; Christopher B. Murray; Andrey L. Rogach; Paul S. Weiss; Itamar Willner; Wolfgang J. Parak

Colloidal nanoparticles (NPs) have become versatile building blocks in a wide variety of fields. Here, we discuss the state-of-the-art, current hot topics, and future directions based on the following aspects: narrow size-distribution NPs can exhibit protein-like properties; monodispersity of NPs is not always required; assembled NPs can exhibit collective behavior; NPs can be assembled one by one; there is more to be connected with NPs; NPs can be designed to be smart; surface-modified NPs can directly reach the cytosols of living cells.

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S. J. Stranick

Pennsylvania State University

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Brent A. Mantooth

Pennsylvania State University

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Mark W. Horn

Pennsylvania State University

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