Valentin Flauraud
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Valentin Flauraud.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2016
Valentin Flauraud; Massimo Mastrangeli; Gabriel D. Bernasconi; Jérémy Butet; Duncan T. L. Alexander; Elmira Shahrabi; Olivier J. F. Martin; Juergen Brugger
Predetermined and selective placement of nanoparticles onto large-area substrates with nanometre-scale precision is essential to harness the unique properties of nanoparticle assemblies, in particular for functional optical and electro-optical nanodevices. Unfortunately, such high spatial organization is currently beyond the reach of top-down nanofabrication techniques alone. Here, we demonstrate that topographic features comprising lithographed funnelled traps and auxiliary sidewalls on a solid substrate can deterministically direct the capillary assembly of Au nanorods to attain simultaneous control of position, orientation and interparticle distance at the nanometre level. We report up to 100% assembly yield over centimetre-scale substrates. We achieve this by optimizing the three sequential stages of capillary nanoparticle assembly: insertion of nanorods into the traps, resilience against the receding suspension front and drying of the residual solvent. Finally, using electron energy-loss spectroscopy we characterize the spectral response and near-field properties of spatially programmable Au nanorod dimers, highlighting the opportunities for precise tunability of the plasmonic modes in larger assemblies.
Nano Letters | 2015
Valentin Flauraud; Thomas S. van Zanten; Mathieu Mivelle; Carlo Manzo; Maria Garcia Parajo; Jürgen Brugger
We present a novel blurring-free stencil lithography patterning technique for high-throughput fabrication of large-scale arrays of nanoaperture optical antennas. The approach relies on dry etching through nanostencils to achieve reproducible and uniform control of nanoantenna geometries at the nanoscale, over millimeter-sizes in a thin aluminum film. We demonstrate the fabrication of over 400 000 bowtie nanoaperture (BNA) antennas on biocompatible substrates, having gap sizes ranging from (80 ± 5) nm down to (20 ± 10) nm. To validate their applicability on live cell research, we used the antenna substrates as hotspots of localized illumination to excite fluorescently labeled lipids on living cell membranes. The high signal-to-background afforded by the BNA arrays allowed the recording of single fluorescent bursts corresponding to the passage of freely diffusing individual lipids through hotspot excitation regions as small as 20 nm. Statistical analysis of burst length and intensity together with simulations demonstrate that the measured signals arise from the ultraconfined excitation region of the antennas. Because these inexpensive antenna arrays are fully biocompatible and amenable to their integration in most fluorescence microscopes, we foresee a large number of applications including the investigation of the plasma membrane of living cells with nanoscale resolution at endogenous expression levels.
Nano Letters | 2017
Valentin Flauraud; Raju Regmi; Pamina M. Winkler; Duncan T. L. Alexander; Hervé Rigneault; Niek F. van Hulst; Maria F. Garcia-Parajo; Jérôme Wenger; Juergen Brugger
Optical nanoantennas have a great potential for enhancing light-matter interactions at the nanometer scale, yet fabrication accuracy and lack of scalability currently limit ultimate antenna performance and applications. In most designs, the region of maximum field localization and enhancement (i.e., hotspot) is not readily accessible to the sample because it is buried into the nanostructure. Moreover, current large-scale fabrication techniques lack reproducible geometrical control below 20 nm. Here, we describe a new nanofabrication technique that applies planarization, etch back, and template stripping to expose the excitation hotspot at the surface, providing a major improvement over conventional electron beam lithography methods. We present large flat surface arrays of in-plane nanoantennas, featuring gaps as small as 10 nm with sharp edges, excellent reproducibility and full surface accessibility of the hotspot confined region. The novel fabrication approach drastically improves the optical performance of plasmonic nanoantennas to yield giant fluorescence enhancement factors up to 104-105 times, together with nanoscale detection volumes in the 20 zL range. The method is fully scalable and adaptable to a wide range of antenna designs. We foresee broad applications by the use of these in-plane antenna geometries ranging from large-scale ultrasensitive sensor chips to microfluidics and live cell membrane investigations.
ACS Nano | 2017
Valentin Flauraud; Gabriel D. Bernasconi; Jérémy Butet; Duncan T. L. Alexander; Olivier J. F. Martin; Jürgen Brugger
While plasmonic antennas composed of building blocks made of the same material have been thoroughly studied, recent investigations have highlighted the unique opportunities enabled by making compositionally asymmetric plasmonic systems. So far, mainly heterostructures composed of nanospheres and nanodiscs have been investigated, revealing opportunities for the design of Fano resonant nanostructures, directional scattering, sensing and catalytic applications. In this article, an improved fabrication method is reported that enables precise tuning of the heterodimer geometry, with interparticle distances made down to a few nanometers between Au-Ag and Au-Al nanoparticles. A wide range of mode energy detuning and coupling conditions are observed by near field hyperspectral imaging performed with electron energy loss spectroscopy, supported by full wave analysis numerical simulations. These results provide direct insights into the mode hybridization of plasmonic heterodimers, pointing out the influence of each dimer constituent in the overall electromagnetic response. By relating the coupling of nondipolar modes and plasmon-interband interaction with the dimer geometry, this work facilitates the development of plasmonic heterostructures with tailored responses, beyond the possibilities offered by homodimers.
ACS Nano | 2017
Pamina M. Winkler; Raju Regmi; Valentin Flauraud; Jürgen Brugger; Hervé Rigneault; Jérôme Wenger; Maria F. Garcia-Parajo
Nanoscale membrane assemblies of sphingolipids, cholesterol, and certain proteins, also known as lipid rafts, play a crucial role in facilitating a broad range of important cell functions. Whereas on living cell membranes lipid rafts have been postulated to have nanoscopic dimensions and to be highly transient, the existence of a similar type of dynamic nanodomains in multicomponent lipid bilayers has been questioned. Here, we perform fluorescence correlation spectroscopy on planar plasmonic antenna arrays with different nanogap sizes to assess the dynamic nanoscale organization of mimetic biological membranes. Our approach takes advantage of the highly enhanced and confined excitation light provided by the nanoantennas together with their outstanding planarity to investigate membrane regions as small as 10 nm in size with microsecond time resolution. Our diffusion data are consistent with the coexistence of transient nanoscopic domains in both the liquid-ordered and the liquid-disordered microscopic phases of multicomponent lipid bilayers. These nanodomains have characteristic residence times between 30 and 150 μs and sizes around 10 nm, as inferred from the diffusion data. Thus, although microscale phase separation occurs on mimetic membranes, nanoscopic domains also coexist, suggesting that these transient assemblies might be similar to those occurring in living cells, which in the absence of raft-stabilizing proteins are poised to be short-lived. Importantly, our work underscores the high potential of photonic nanoantennas to interrogate the nanoscale heterogeneity of native biological membranes with ultrahigh spatiotemporal resolution.
Nano Letters | 2017
Raju Regmi; Pamina M. Winkler; Valentin Flauraud; Kyra J. E. Borgman; Carlo Manzo; Jürgen Brugger; Hervé Rigneault; Jérôme Wenger; Maria F. Garcia-Parajo
Optical nanoantennas can efficiently confine light into nanoscopic hotspots, enabling single-molecule detection sensitivity at biological relevant conditions. This innovative approach to breach the diffraction limit offers a versatile platform to investigate the dynamics of individual biomolecules in living cell membranes and their partitioning into cholesterol-dependent lipid nanodomains. Here, we present optical nanoantenna arrays with accessible surface hotspots to study the characteristic diffusion dynamics of phosphoethanolamine (PE) and sphingomyelin (SM) in the plasma membrane of living cells at the nanoscale. Fluorescence burst analysis and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy performed on nanoantennas of different gap sizes show that, unlike PE, SM is transiently trapped in cholesterol-enriched nanodomains of 10 nm diameter with short characteristic times around 100 μs. The removal of cholesterol led to the free diffusion of SM, consistent with the dispersion of nanodomains. Our results are consistent with the existence of highly transient and fluctuating nanoscale assemblies enriched by cholesterol and sphingolipids in living cell membranes, also known as lipid rafts. Quantitative data on sphingolipids partitioning into lipid rafts is crucial to understand the spatiotemporal heterogeneous organization of transient molecular complexes on the membrane of living cells at the nanoscale. The proposed technique is fully biocompatible and thus provides various opportunities for biophysics and live cell research to reveal details that remain hidden in confocal diffraction-limited measurements.
ACS Nano | 2018
Regina Judith Hafner; Liangfei Tian; Jan C. Brauer; Thomas Schmaltz; Andrzej Sienkiewicz; Sandor Balog; Valentin Flauraud; Juergen Brugger; Holger Frauenrath
Photocharge generation and formation of long-lived charge carriers are relevant in photosynthesis, photocatalysis, photovoltaics, and organic electronics. A better understanding of the factors that determine these processes in synthetic polymer semiconductors is crucial, but difficult due to their morphological inhomogeneity. Here, we report the formation of exceptionally long-lived photocharges in one-dimensional organic semiconductor nanostructures. These nanostructures consist of chiral oligopeptide-substituted thienothiophene-based chromophores and exhibit a well-defined helical arrangement of these chromophores at their core. The chromophores give rise to spectroscopic H-aggregates and show strong intermolecular excitonic coupling. We demonstrate that all of these parameters are the prerequisites required for the nanostructures to show the efficient formation of polaron-like photocharges upon irradiation with a low-power white light source. The observed charge carriers in the helical nanowires show an unusually long lifetime on the order of several hours and are formed at high concentrations of up to 3 mol % in the absence of any dedicated electron acceptor. They are observed in solution as well as in film and furthermore give rise to a light-induced increase of the macroscopic charge transport. By contrast, no such photocharge generation is observed either in non-aggregating reference systems of the same chromophores or in aggregated but non-helical systems that do not form one-dimensional nanostructures. Our results thus demonstrate a clear correlation between nanoscopic confinement and the generation of long-lived photocharges.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Gabriel D. Bernasconi; Valentin Flauraud; Duncan T. L. Alexander; Jürgen Brugger; Olivier J. F. Martin; Jérémy Butet
Electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) has become an experimental method of choice for the investigation of localized surface plasmon resonances, allowing the simultaneous mapping of the associated field distributions and their resonant energies with a nanoscale spatial resolution. The experimental observations have been well-supported by numerical models based on the computation of the Lorentz force acting on the impinging electrons by the scattered field. However, in this framework, the influence of the intrinsic properties of the plasmonic nanostructures studied with the electron energy-loss (EEL) measurements is somehow hidden in the global response. To overcome this limitation, we propose to go beyond this standard, and well-established, electron perspective and instead to interpret the EELS data using directly the intrinsic properties of the nanostructures, without regard to the force acting on the electron. The proposed method is particularly well-suited for the description of coupled plasmonic systems, because the role played by each individual nanoparticle in the observed EEL spectrum can be clearly disentangled, enabling a more subtle understanding of the underlying physical processes. As examples, we consider different plasmonic geometries in order to emphasize the benefits of this new conceptual approach for interpreting experimental EELS data. In particular, we use it to describe results from samples made by traditional thin film patterning and by arranging colloidal nanostructures.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018
Pamina M. Winkler; Raju Regmi; Valentin Flauraud; Juergen Brugger; Hervé Rigneault; Jérôme Wenger; Maria F. Garcia-Parajo
The plasma membrane of living cells is compartmentalized at multiple spatial scales ranging from the nano- to the mesoscale. This nonrandom organization is crucial for a large number of cellular functions. At the nanoscale, cell membranes organize into dynamic nanoassemblies enriched by cholesterol, sphingolipids, and certain types of proteins. Investigating these nanoassemblies known as lipid rafts is of paramount interest in fundamental cell biology. However, this goal requires simultaneous nanometer spatial precision and microsecond temporal resolution, which is beyond the reach of common microscopes. Optical antennas based on metallic nanostructures efficiently enhance and confine light into nanometer dimensions, breaching the diffraction limit of light. In this Perspective, we discuss recent progress combining optical antennas with fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) to monitor microsecond dynamics at nanoscale spatial dimensions. These new developments offer numerous opportunities to investigate lipid and protein dynamics in both mimetic and native biological membranes.
european quantum electronics conference | 2017
Gabriel D. Bernasconi; Jérémy Butet; Valentin Flauraud; Duncan T. L. Alexander; Jürgen Brugger; Olivier J. F. Martin
Second harmonic generation (SHG) is an important tool for the study of plasmonic nanostructures and can open up important sensing applications since the second harmonic (SH) signal has an increased sensitivity to nanostructures shape and environment in comparison with the linear scattering [1,2]. SHG from plasmonic centrosymmetric nanostructures is controlled by two main properties. First, SHG is forbidden in the bulk of centrosymmetric structures in the dipolar approximation, meaning that nanostructures made of metals like gold and silver generate a SH signal coming mainly from their surfaces, where the symmetry is effectively broken. Second, because of the same symmetry reason, a dipolar excitation at the fundamental frequency induces SH modes with vanishing dipole moments [3]. In the case of plasmonic dimers, with the large intensity enhancement occurring in the gap, the SH emission is limited due to out-of-phase SH sources with destructive interferences in the far-field region. Consequently, new strategies must be developed to overcome this limitation.