Jennifer A. Dionne

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Name: Dionne, Jennifer
Organization: Stanford University , USA
Department: Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Title: Assistant(PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Alice Lay, Derek S. Wang, Michael D. Wisser, Randy D. Mehlenbacher, Yu Lin, Miriam B. Goodman, Wendy L. Mao, and Jennifer A. Dionne
Nano Letters July 12, 2017 Volume 17(Issue 7) pp:4172-4172
Publication Date(Web):June 13, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b00963
Mechanical forces affect a myriad of processes, from bone growth to material fracture to touch-responsive robotics. While nano- to micro-Newton forces are prevalent at the microscopic scale, few methods have the nanoscopic size and signal stability to measure them in vivo or in situ. Here, we develop an optical force-sensing platform based on sub-25 nm NaYF4 nanoparticles (NPs) doped with Yb3+, Er3+, and Mn2+. The lanthanides Yb3+ and Er3+ enable both photoluminescence and upconversion, while the energetically coupled d-metal Mn2+ adds force tunability through its crystal field sensitivity. Using a diamond anvil cell to exert up to 3.5 GPa pressure or ∼10 μN force per particle, we track stress-induced spectral responses. The red (660 nm) to green (520, 540 nm) emission ratio varies linearly with pressure, yielding an observed color change from orange to red for α-NaYF4 and from yellow–green to green for d-metal optimized β-NaYF4 when illuminated in the near infrared. Consistent readouts are recorded over multiple pressure cycles and hours of illumination. With the nanoscopic size, a dynamic range of 100 nN to 10 μN, and photostability, these nanoparticles lay the foundation for visualizing dynamic mechanical processes, such as stress propagation in materials and force signaling in organisms.Keywords: crystal field theory; d-metal; diamond anvil cell; force sensor; lanthanides; Upconversion;
Co-reporter:Michael D. Wisser, Stefan Fischer, Peter C. Maurer, Noah D. Bronstein, Steven Chu, A. Paul Alivisatos, Alberto Salleo, and Jennifer A. Dionne
ACS Photonics 2016 Volume 3(Issue 8) pp:1523
Publication Date(Web):July 22, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acsphotonics.6b00166
Lanthanide-based upconverting nanoparticles exhibit significant promise for solar energy generation, biological imaging, and security technologies but have not seen widespread adoption due to the prohibitively low efficiencies of current materials. Weak transition dipole moments between 4f orbitals hinder both photon absorption and emission. Here, we introduce a novel way to increase the radiative transition rates in Yb,Er-based upconverting nanoparticles based on local symmetry distortion. Beginning from a host matrix of the well-studied hexagonal (β)-phase NaYF4, we incrementally remove Y3+ ions and cosubstitute for them a 1:1 mixture of Gd3+ and Lu3+. These two ions act to expand and contract the lattice, respectively, inducing local-level distortion while maintaining the average host structure. We synthesize a range of β-NaY0.8–2xGdxLuxF4:Yb0.18Er0.02 nanoparticles and experimentally confirm that particle size, phase, global structure, and Yb3+ and Er3+ concentrations remain constant as x is varied. Upconversion quantum yield is probed as the degree of cosubstitution is varied from x = 0 to x = 0.24. We achieve a maximum quantum yield value of 0.074% under 63 W/cm2 of excitation power density, representing a 1.6× enhancement over the unmodified particles and the highest measured value for near-infrared-to-visible upconversion in sub-25 nm unshelled nanoparticles. We also investigate upconversion emission at the single-particle level and report record improvements in emission intensity for sub-50 nm particles. Radiative rate enhancements are confirmed by measuring excited-state lifetimes. The approach described herein can be used in combination with more established methods of efficiency improvement, such as adding passivating shells or coupling to plasmonic nanoattenas, to further boost the upconversion quantum yield.Keywords: crystal symmetry; lanthanides; optical selection rules; quantum yield; radiative rate; upconversion
Co-reporter:Yang Zhao, Amr A. E. Saleh, and Jennifer A. Dionne
ACS Photonics 2016 Volume 3(Issue 3) pp:
Publication Date(Web):February 23, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acsphotonics.5b00574
Enantiomer separation is a critical step in many chemical syntheses, particularly for pharmaceuticals, but prevailing chemical methods remain inefficient. Here, we introduce an optical technique to sort chiral specimens using coaxial plasmonic apertures. These apertures are composed of a deeply subwavelength silica channel embedded in silver and can stably trap sub-20 nm dielectric nanoparticles. Using both full-field simulations and analytic calculations, we show that selective trapping of enantiomers can be achieved with circularly polarized illumination. Opposite enantiomers experience distinct trapping forces in both sign and magnitude: one is trapped in a deep potential well, while the other is repelled with a potential barrier. These potentials maintain opposite signs across a range of chiral polarizabilities and enantiomer–aperture separations. Our theory indicates that the interaction of chiral light and chiral specimens can be mediated by achiral plasmonic apertures, providing a possible route toward all-optical enantiopure syntheses.
Co-reporter:Jonathan A. Scholl, Aitzol Garcia-Etxarri, Garikoitz Aguirregabiria, Ruben Esteban, Tarun C. Narayan, Ai Leen Koh, Javier Aizpurua, and Jennifer A. Dionne
ACS Nano 2016 Volume 10(Issue 1) pp:1346
Publication Date(Web):December 5, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acsnano.5b06738
Plasmonic multinanoparticle systems exhibit collective electric and magnetic resonances that are fundamental for the development of state-of-the-art optical nanoantennas, metamaterials, and surface-enhanced spectroscopy substrates. While electric dipolar modes have been investigated in both the classical and quantum realm, little attention has been given to magnetic and other “dark” modes at the smallest dimensions. Here, we study the collective electric, magnetic, and dark modes of colloidally synthesized silver nanosphere trimers with varying interparticle separation using scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS). This technique enables direct visualization and spatially selective excitation of individual trimers, as well as manipulation of the interparticle distance into the subnanometer regime with the electron beam. Our experiments reveal that bonding electric and magnetic modes are significantly impacted by quantum effects, exhibiting a relative blueshift and reduced EELS amplitude compared to classical predictions. In contrast, the trimer’s electric dark mode is not affected by quantum tunneling for even Ångström-scale interparticle separations. We employ a quantum-corrected model to simulate the effect of electron tunneling in the trimer which shows excellent agreement with experimental results. This understanding of classical and quantum-influenced hybridized modes may impact the development of future quantum plasmonic materials and devices, including Fano-like molecular sensors and quantum metamaterials.Keywords: electron energy-loss spectroscopy; nanoparticle; plasmon; quantum tunneling; quantum-corrected model;
Co-reporter:Michael D. Wisser, Maverick Chea, Yu Lin, Di M. Wu, Wendy L. Mao, Alberto Salleo, and Jennifer A. Dionne
Nano Letters 2015 Volume 15(Issue 3) pp:1891-1897
Publication Date(Web):February 3, 2015
DOI:10.1021/nl504738k
NaYF4:Yb3+,Er3+ nanoparticle upconverters are hindered by low quantum efficiencies arising in large part from the parity-forbidden nature of their optical transitions and the nonoptimal spatial separations between lanthanide ions. Here, we use pressure-induced lattice distortion to systematically modify both parameters. Although hexagonal-phase nanoparticles exhibit a monotonic decrease in upconversion emission, cubic-phase particles experience a nearly 2-fold increase in efficiency. In-situ X-ray diffraction indicates that these emission changes require only a 1% reduction in lattice constant. Our work highlights the intricate relationship between upconversion efficiency and lattice geometry and provides a promising approach to modifying the quantum efficiency of any lanthanide upconverter.
Co-reporter:Di M. Wu, Aitzol García-Etxarri, Alberto Salleo, and Jennifer A. Dionne
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 2014 Volume 5(Issue 22) pp:4020-4031
Publication Date(Web):October 30, 2014
DOI:10.1021/jz5019042
Upconversion, the conversion of photons from lower to higher energies, is a process that promises applications ranging from high-efficiency photovoltaic and photocatalytic cells to background-free bioimaging and therapeutic probes. Existing upconverting materials, however, remain too inefficient for viable implementation. In this Perspective, we describe the significant improvements in upconversion efficiency that can be achieved using plasmon resonances. As collective oscillations of free electrons, plasmon resonances can be used to enhance both the incident electromagnetic field intensity and the radiative emission rates. To date, this approach has shown upconversion enhancements up to 450×. We discuss both theoretical underpinnings and experimental demonstrations of plasmon-enhanced upconversion, examining the roles of upconverter quantum yield, plasmonic geometry, and plasmon spectral overlap. We also discuss nonoptical consequences of including metal nanostructures near upconverting emitters. The rapidly expanding field of plasmon-enhanced upconversion provides novel fundamental insight into nanoscale light–matter interactions while improving prospects for technological relevance.
Co-reporter:Jonathan A. Scholl, Aitzol García-Etxarri, Ai Leen Koh, and Jennifer A. Dionne
Nano Letters 2013 Volume 13(Issue 2) pp:564-569
Publication Date(Web):December 17, 2012
DOI:10.1021/nl304078v
The plasmon resonances of two closely spaced metallic particles have enabled applications including single-molecule sensing and spectroscopy, novel nanoantennas, molecular rulers, and nonlinear optical devices. In a classical electrodynamic context, the strength of such dimer plasmon resonances increases monotonically as the particle gap size decreases. In contrast, a quantum mechanical framework predicts that electron tunneling will strongly diminish the dimer plasmon strength for subnanometer-scale separations. Here, we directly observe the plasmon resonances of coupled metallic nanoparticles as their gap size is reduced to atomic dimensions. Using the electron beam of a scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM), we manipulate pairs of ∼10-nm-diameter spherical silver nanoparticles on a substrate, controlling their convergence and eventual coalescence into a single nanosphere. We simultaneously employ electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) to observe the dynamic plasmonic properties of these dimers before and after particle contact. As separations are reduced from 7 nm, the dominant dipolar peak exhibits a redshift consistent with classical calculations. However, gaps smaller than ∼0.5 nm cause this mode to exhibit a reduced intensity consistent with quantum theories that incorporate electron tunneling. As the particles overlap, the bonding dipolar mode disappears and is replaced by a dipolar charge transfer mode. Our dynamic imaging, manipulation, and spectroscopy of nanostructures enables the first full spectral mapping of dimer plasmon evolution and may provide new avenues for in situ nanoassembly and analysis in the quantum regime.
Anthracene, diphenyl-
Palladium, [2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-octaethyl-21H,23H-porphinato(2-)-κN21,κN22,κN23,κN24]-, (SP-4-1)-
sodium yttrium(3+) tetrafluoride
Streptavidin