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Dive into the research topics where Salmaan H. Baxamusa is active.

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Featured researches published by Salmaan H. Baxamusa.


ACS Nano | 2011

Effect of Gold Nanorod Surface Chemistry on Cellular Response

Christin Grabinski; Nicole M. Schaeublin; Andy Wijaya; Helen D’Couto; Salmaan H. Baxamusa; Kimberly Hamad-Schifferli; Saber M. Hussain

Gold nanorods (GNRs) stabilized with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and GNR functionalized via a ligand exchange method with either thiolated polyethylene glycol (PEG(5000)) or mercaptohexadecanoic acid (MHDA) were investigated for their stability in biological media and subsequent toxicological effects to HaCaT cells. GNR-PEG and GNR-MHDA exhibited minimal effects on cell proliferation, whereas GNR-CTAB reduced cell proliferation significantly due to the inherent toxicity of the cationic surfactant to cells. Cell uptake studies indicated relatively low uptake for GNR-PEG and high uptake for GNR-MHDA. Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) revealed that GNR-PEG induced less significant and unique changes in the transcription levels of 84 genes related to stress and toxicity compared to GNR-MHDA. The results demonstrate that, although cell proliferation was not affected by both particles, there is a significant difference in gene expression in GNR-MHDA exposed cells, suggesting long-term implications for chronic exposure.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Patterning Nanodomains with Orthogonal Functionalities: Solventless Synthesis of Self-Sorting Surfaces

Sung Gap Im; Ki Wan Bong; Byeong-Su Kim; Salmaan H. Baxamusa; Paula T. Hammond; Patrick S. Doyle; Karen K. Gleason

Vapor deposited functional polymer thin films can undergo rapid covalent functionalization. Patterning of two functional layers displaying orthogonal reactivity enables sorting of aqueous mixtures of dyes and nanoparticles, such as quantum dots, onto selective areas of nanopatterned surfaces.


Materials Today | 2010

Designing polymer surfaces via vapor deposition

Ayse Asatekin; Miles C. Barr; Salmaan H. Baxamusa; Kenneth K. S. Lau; Wyatt E. Tenhaeff; Jingjing Xu; Karen K. Gleason

Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) methods significantly augment the capabilities of traditional surface modification techniques for designing polymeric surfaces. In CVD polymerization, the monomer(s) are delivered to the surface through the vapor phase and then undergo simultaneous polymerization and thin film formation. By eliminating the need to dissolve macromolecules, CVD enables insoluble polymers to be coated and prevents solvent damage to the substrate. Since de-wetting and surface tension effects are absent, CVD coatings conform to the geometry of the underlying substrate. Hence, CVD polymers can be readily applied to virtually any substrate: organic, inorganic, rigid, flexible, planar, three-dimensional, dense, or porous. CVD methods integrate readily with other vacuum processes used to fabricate patterned surfaces and devices. CVD film growth proceeds from the substrate up, allowing for interfacial engineering, real-time monitoring, thickness control, and the synthesis of films with graded composition. This article focuses on two CVD polymerization methods that closely translate solution chemistry to vapor deposition; initiated CVD and oxidative CVD. The basic concepts underlying these methods and the resultant advantages over other thin film coating techniques are described, along with selected applications where CVD polymers are an enabling technology.


ACS Nano | 2008

Conformal coverage of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) films with tunable nanoporosity via oxidative chemical vapor deposition.

Sung Gap Im; David Kusters; Wonjae Choi; Salmaan H. Baxamusa; M.C.M. van de Sanden; Karen K. Gleason

Novel nanoporous poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) films with basalt-like surface morphology are successfully obtained via a one-step, vapor phase process of oxidative chemical vapor deposition (oCVD) by introducing a new oxidant, CuCl(2). The substrate temperature of the oCVD process is a crucial process parameter for controlling electrical conductivity and conjugation length. Moreover, the surface morphology is also systemically tunable through variations in substrate temperature, a unique advantage of the oCVD process. By increasing the substrate temperature, the surface morphology becomes more porous, with the textured structure on the nanometer scale. The size of nanopores and fibrils appears uniformly over 25 mm x 25 mm areas on the Si wafer substrates. Conformal coverage of PEDOT films grown with the CuCl(2) oxidant (C-PEDOT) is observed on both standard trench structures with high aspect ratio and fragile surfaces with complex topology, such as paper, results which are extremely difficult to achieve with liquid phase based processes. The tunable nanoporosity and its conformal coverage on various complex geometries are highly desirable for many device applications requiring controlled, high interfacial area, such as supercapacitors, Li ion battery electrodes, and sensors. For example, a highly hydrophilic surface with the static water contact angle down to less than 10 degrees is obtained solely by changing surface morphology. By applying fluorinated polymer film onto the nanoporous C-PEDOT via initiative chemical vapor deposition (iCVD), the C-PEDOT surface also shows the contact angle higher than 150 degrees . The hierarchical porous structure of fluorinated polymer coated C-PEDOT on a paper mat shows superhydrophobicity and oil repellency.


Biomacromolecules | 2008

Protection of Sensors for Biological Applications by Photoinitiated Chemical Vapor Deposition of Hydrogel Thin Films

Salmaan H. Baxamusa; Laura Montero; J. Matthew Dubach; Heather A. Clark; Salvador Borrós; Karen K. Gleason

We report photoinitiated chemical vapor deposition (piCVD), a gentle synthetic method for the preparation of ultrathin films (approximately 100 nm) of the hydrogel poly(hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (pHEMA). piCVD occurs near room temperature and requires only mild vacuum conditions. The deposited films swell rapidly and reversibly in buffer solution, and the swelling properties can be controlled via the deposition conditions. Analysis of the swelling data indicates that the mesh size of the hydrogel creates a selectively permeable coating. The mesh is large enough to allow small molecule analytes to permeate the film but small enough to prevent the transport of large biomolecules such as proteins. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) shows that the films decrease nonspecific adhesion of the protein albumin by nearly 8-fold over bare silicon. A dry process, piCVD is suitable for coating particles with diameters as small as 5 microm. The absence of solvents and plasmas in piCVD allows films to be directly synthesized on optode sensors without degradation of sensitivity or response time.


Small | 2011

Quantifying the nanomachinery of the nanoparticle-biomolecule interface.

Helena de Puig; Stefania Federici; Salmaan H. Baxamusa; Paolo Bergese; Kimberly Hamad-Schifferli

A study is presented of the nanomechanical phenomena experienced by nanoparticle-conjugated biomolecules. A thermodynamic framework is developed to describe the binding of thrombin-binding aptamer (TBA) to thrombin when the TBA is conjugated to nanorods. Binding results in nanorod aggregation (viz. directed self-assembly), which is detectable by absorption spectroscopy. The analysis introduces the energy of aggregation, separating it into TBA-thrombin recognition and surface-work contributions. Consequently, it is demonstrated that self-assembly is driven by the interplay of surface work and thrombin-TBA recognition. It is shown that the work at the surface is about -10 kJ mol(-1) and results from the accumulation of in-plane molecular forces of pN magnitude and with a lifetime of <1 s, which arises from TBA nanoscale rearrangements fuelled by thrombin-directed nanorod aggregation. The obtained surface work can map aggregation regimes as a function of different nanoparticle surface conditions. Also, the thermodynamic treatment can be used to obtain quantitative information on surface effects impacting biomolecules on nanoparticle surfaces.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Selective Light-Triggered Release of DNA from Gold Nanorods Switches Blood Clotting On and Off

Helena de Puig; Anna Cifuentes Rius; Dorma Flemister; Salmaan H. Baxamusa; Kimberly Hamad-Schifferli

Blood clotting is a precise cascade engineered to form a clot with temporal and spatial control. Current control of blood clotting is achieved predominantly by anticoagulants and thus inherently one-sided. Here we use a pair of nanorods (NRs) to provide a two-way switch for the blood clotting cascade by utilizing their ability to selectively release species on their surface under two different laser excitations. We selectively trigger release of a thrombin binding aptamer from one nanorod, inhibiting blood clotting and resulting in increased clotting time. We then release the complementary DNA as an antidote from the other NR, reversing the effect of the aptamer and restoring blood clotting. Thus, the nanorod pair acts as an on/off switch. One challenge for nanobiotechnology is the bio-nano interface, where coronas of weakly adsorbed proteins can obscure biomolecular function. We exploit these adsorbed proteins to increase aptamer and antidote loading on the nanorods.


Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2010

Self-Aligned Micropatterns of Bifunctional Polymer Surfaces with Independent Chemical and Topographical Contrast

Salmaan H. Baxamusa; Laura Montero; Salvador Borrós; Karen K. Gleason

Bifunctional surfaces are micropatterned using a self-aligned, dual-purpose lithographic mask and pairs of conformally deposited iCVD polymers. A first layer is deposited, then physically masked and etched in oxygen plasma. A second layer is deposited with the mask still in place. Lift-off reveals the micropatterned surface. The thicknesses of the two layers are independently controlled so that the resultant surface displays both chemical and topographical contrast. The patterning scheme is independent of the polymers used and order of deposition. We use this scheme to create surfaces that spatially confine microcondensation, as well as chemical functionality. We also demonstrate microwells whose depth can be altered in response to a water stimulus.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009

Initiated and oxidative chemical vapor deposition: a scalable method for conformal and functional polymer films on real substrates

Salmaan H. Baxamusa; Sung Gap Im; Karen K. Gleason


Advanced Functional Materials | 2009

Random Copolymer Films with Molecular-Scale Compositional Heterogeneities that Interfere with Protein Adsorption

Salmaan H. Baxamusa; Karen K. Gleason

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Karen K. Gleason

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Kimberly Hamad-Schifferli

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Sung Gap Im

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Nathan J. Trujillo

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Wyatt E. Tenhaeff

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Helena de Puig Guixe

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Helena de Puig

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ki Wan Bong

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Patrick S. Doyle

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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