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NEMS Oscillators May Detect Toxins

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ITHACA, N.Y., March 18, 2010 - By watching how energy moves across a tiny device, Cornell researchers are a step closer to creating extraordinarily tiny sensors that can instantly recognize harmful substances in air or water.

Led by physics professor Harold Craighead, the investigators made a device just 200 nm thick and a few microns long with an oscillating cantilever hanging off one end. They identified exactly how to tune its sensitivity - a breakthrough that could lead to advanced sensing technologies. The experiments detailed how these oscillators, which are nanoelectromechanical systems, could one day be made into everyday devices by lining up millions of them and treating each cantilever with a certain molecule.


Shown is an illustration of the nanoelectromechanical oscillator, with the cantilever on the far right. The inset is a tilted 3-D profile of the structure, which shows the silicon dioxide posts.

"The big purpose is to be able to drive arrays of these things all in direct synchrony," said first author of the study, Rob Ilic, a research associate at the Cornell NanoScale Science and Technology Facility. "They can be functionalized with different chemistries and biomolecules to detect various pathogens - not just one thing."

The cantilever is like a diving board that resonates at distinct frequencies. In past research, the team has demonstrated that by treating the cantilever with different substances, they can tell what other substances are present. For example, E. coli antibodies attached to the cantilever can detect the presence of E. coli in water.

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By laying their device on top of a layer of silicon dioxide, all of which rest on a silicon substrate, the researchers have perfected the oscillators' design, Ilic said. A pad with holes connects pegs of silicon dioxide, lined up like telephone poles, which eventually end at the cantilever.

A laser beam, switched on at the far end from the cantilever, travels down the device and causes the oscillator to wobble. The frequency is measured by shining another laser on the oscillator and noting patterns in the reflected light.

The "telephone poles" allow the energy to move efficiently across the device by preventing it from buckling or sagging. The design makes it easy to read the resonant frequency of the cantilever.

In this process, the researchers discovered that over short distances, the energy from the laser came in the form of heat, which quickly dissipates. However, when the laser was parked hundreds of microns away from the cantilever, the energy came in the form of acoustical waves that traveled through the device, dissipated more slowly, and allowed them to make their device longer.

For more information, visit: www.news.cornell.edu  

Published: March 2010
Glossary
nano
An SI prefix meaning one billionth (10-9). Nano can also be used to indicate the study of atoms, molecules and other structures and particles on the nanometer scale. Nano-optics (also referred to as nanophotonics), for example, is the study of how light and light-matter interactions behave on the nanometer scale. See nanophotonics.
silicon dioxide
An abundant material found in the form of quartz and agate and as one of the major constituents of sand. The silicates of sodium, calcium, and other metals can be readily fused, and on cooling do not crystallize, but instead form the familiar transparent material glass.
acoustical wavesAmericasBiophotonicsCornell NanoScale Science and Technology Facilitydetect toxinsE. coliHarold CraigheadImagingIthacananonanoelectromechanical systemsnanosensorNEMSNew YorkoscillatorResearch & Technologyresonant frequencyRob Ilicsensing technologiesSensors & Detectorssilicon dioxideTest & MeasurementLasers

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