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Dive into the research topics where Sebastian Heeg is active.

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Featured researches published by Sebastian Heeg.


Nano Letters | 2013

Polarized Plasmonic Enhancement by Au Nanostructures Probed through Raman Scattering of Suspended Graphene

Sebastian Heeg; Roberto Fernandez-Garcia; Antonios Oikonomou; F. Schedin; Rohit Narula; Stefan A. Maier; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Stephanie Reich

We characterize plasmonic enhancement in a hotspot between two Au nanodisks using Raman scattering of graphene. Single layer graphene is suspended across the dimer cavity and provides an ideal two-dimensional test material for the local near-field distribution. We detect a Raman enhancement of the order of 10(3) originating from the cavity. Spatially resolved Raman measurements reveal a near-field localization one order of magnitude smaller than the wavelength of the excitation, which can be turned off by rotating the polarization of the excitation. The suspended graphene is under tensile strain. The resulting phonon mode softening allows for a clear identification of the enhanced signal compared to unperturbed graphene.


ACS Nano | 2011

Selective Bundling of Zigzag Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes

Carolin Blum; Ninette Stürzl; Frank Hennrich; Sergei Lebedkin; Sebastian Heeg; Heiko Dumlich; Stephanie Reich; Manfred M. Kappes

A simple, high throughput fractionation procedure for aqueous/SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate) suspensions of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) is presented, which yields thin bundles of semiconducting-SWNTs with small chiral angles. To demonstrate this we show the photoluminescence signatures of nanotube suspensions that contain almost exclusively zigzag and near-zigzag tubes. Starting suspensions and resulting fractions were characterized using optical absorption, resonance Raman and photoluminescence spectroscopies as well as scanning force microscopy. Taken together with literature observations, our findings suggest that near zigzag edge tubes of similar diameters in a bundle are harder to separate from each other than for other chiral index combinations. We discuss the implications of these observations for SWNT growth and dispersion.


Nano Letters | 2014

Plasmon-Enhanced Raman Scattering by Carbon Nanotubes Optically Coupled with Near-Field Cavities

Sebastian Heeg; Antonios Oikonomou; Roberto Fernandez-Garcia; Christian Lehmann; Stefan A. Maier; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Stephanie Reich

We realize the coupling of carbon nanotubes as a one-dimensional model system to near-field cavities for plasmon-enhanced Raman scattering. Directed dielectrophoretic assembly places single-walled carbon nanotubes precisely into the gap of gold nanodimers. The plasmonic cavities enhance the Raman signal of a small nanotube bundle by a factor of 103. The enhanced signal arises exclusively from tube segments within the cavity as we confirm by spatially resolved Raman measurements. Through the energy and polarization of the excitation we address the extrinsic plasmonic and the intrinsic nanotube optical response independently. For all incident light polarizations, the nanotube Raman features arise from fully symmetric vibrations only. We find strong evidence that the signal enhancement depends on the orientation of the carbon nanotube relative to the cavity axis.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Graphene Oxide promotes embryonic stem cell differentiation to haematopoietic lineage

Eva Garcia-Alegria; Maria Iluit; Monika Stefanska; Claudio Vieira da Silva; Sebastian Heeg; Susan J. Kimber; Valerie Kouskoff; Georges Lacaud; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Kiran Batta

Pluripotent stem cells represent a promising source of differentiated tissue-specific stem and multipotent progenitor cells for regenerative medicine and drug testing. The realisation of this potential relies on the establishment of robust and reproducible protocols of differentiation. Several reports have highlighted the importance of biomaterials in assisting directed differentiation. Graphene oxide (GO) is a novel material that has attracted increasing interest in the field of biomedicine. In this study, we demonstrate that GO coated substrates significantly enhance the differentiation of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells to both primitive and definitive haematopoietic cells. GO does not affect cell proliferation or survival of differentiated cells but rather enhances the transition of haemangioblasts to haemogenic endothelial cells, a key step during haematopoietic specification. Importantly, GO also improves, in addition to murine, human ES cell differentiation to blood cells. Taken together, our study reveals a positive role for GO in haematopoietic differentiation and suggests that further functionalization of GO could represent a valid strategy for the generation of large numbers of functional blood cells. Producing these cells would accelerate haematopoietic drug toxicity testing and treatment of patients with blood disorders or malignancies.


Chemical Science | 2011

Assembly of carbon nanotubes and alkylated fullerenes: nanocarbon hybrid towards photovoltaic applications

Yanfei Shen; J. S. Reparaz; M. R. Wagner; A. Hoffmann; Christian Thomsen; Jeong-O Lee; Sebastian Heeg; Benjamin Hatting; Stephanie Reich; Akinori Saeki; Shu Seki; Kaname Yoshida; Sukumaran Santhosh Babu; Helmuth Möhwald; Takashi Nakanishi

Taking advantage of the non-covalent interaction between alkyl chains and the sidewalls of a single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT), a nanocarbon hybrid of SWCNT and a fullerene (C60) derivative with long alkyl chains was constructed as a donor–acceptor pair for photovoltaics and nanodevice investigations. It was found that SWCNT could be mostly unbundled by the alkylated C60 (1) and was well-dispersed in organic solvents. As a photoactive material, the resultant nanocarbon hybrid, 1-SWCNT, performed well in light-energy harvesting applications in photoelectrochemical cells and nanoscale field-effect transistors (FET). Moreover, the 1-SWCNT assembly exhibited superhydrophobicity, providing an interesting opportunity to fabricate nanocarbon-based waterproof optoelectronic devices. In order to understand the photoexcitation process, the 1-SWCNT assembly was electrochemically and spectroscopically characterized. The electrochemical results showed that the SWCNT facilitated electronic communication between 1 and the electrode. The steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence and the photoluminescence excitation studies suggested efficient quenching of the singlet excited state of C60. Nanosecond transient absorption data revealed the one-electron reduction of fullerene, C60˙−, thereby demonstrating the photoinduced electron transfer from SWCNT to the C60 unit in the 1-SWCNT assembly.


Nano Letters | 2017

Dual-Scattering Near-Field Microscope for Correlative Nanoimaging of SERS and Electromagnetic Hotspots

Patryk Kusch; Stefan Mastel; Niclas S. Mueller; Nieves Morquillas Azpiazu; Sebastian Heeg; R. V. Gorbachev; F. Schedin; Uwe Hübner; J. I. Pascual; Stephanie Reich; Rainer Hillenbrand

Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) enables sensitive chemical studies and materials identification, relying on electromagnetic (EM) and chemical-enhancement mechanisms. Here we introduce a tool for the correlative nanoimaging of EM and SERS hotspots, areas of strongly enhanced EM fields and Raman scattering, respectively. To that end, we implemented a grating spectrometer into a scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscope (s-SNOM) for mapping of both the elastically and inelastically (Raman) scattered light from the near-field probe, that is, a sharp silicon tip. With plasmon-resonant gold dimers (canonical SERS substrates) we demonstrate with nanoscale spatial resolution that the enhanced Raman scattering from the tip is strongly correlated with its enhanced elastic scattering, the latter providing access to the EM-field enhancement at the illumination frequency. Our technique has wide application potential in the correlative nanoimaging of local-field enhancement and SERS efficiency as well as in the investigation and quality control of novel SERS substrates.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Corrigendum: Graphene Oxide promotes embryonic stem cell differentiation to haematopoietic lineage

Eva Garcia-Alegria; Maria Iliut; Monika Stefanska; Claudio Vieira da Silva; Sebastian Heeg; Susan J. Kimber; Valerie Kouskoff; Georges Lacaud; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Kiran Batta

Scientific Reports 6: Article number: 2591710.1038/srep25917; published online: May202016; updated: July042016 The original version of this Article contained a typographical error in the spelling of the author Maria Iliut which was incorrectly given as Maria Iluit. This has now been corrected in the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Erratum: Corrigendum: Graphene Oxide promotes embryonic stem cell differentiation to haematopoietic lineage

Eva Garcia-Alegria; Maria Iliut; Monika Stefanska; Claudio Vieira da Silva; Sebastian Heeg; Susan J. Kimber; Valerie Kouskoff; Georges Lacaud; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Kiran Batta

Scientific Reports 6: Article number: 2591710.1038/srep25917; published online: May202016; updated: July042016 The original version of this Article contained a typographical error in the spelling of the author Maria Iliut which was incorrectly given as Maria Iluit. This has now been corrected in the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.


Physica Status Solidi B-basic Solid State Physics | 2009

Quantitative composition of a single-walled carbon nanotube sample: Raman scattering versus photoluminescence

Sebastian Heeg; Ermin Malic; Cinzia Casiraghi; Stephanie Reich


Physical Review A | 2016

Surface-enhanced Raman scattering as a higher-order Raman process

Niclas Müller; Sebastian Heeg; Stephanie Reich

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Stephanie Reich

Free University of Berlin

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Nick Clark

University of Manchester

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F. Schedin

University of Manchester

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Patryk Kusch

Free University of Berlin

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