ֱ

Research | Queen’s University Canada

Custom Search Form

    Search Type

    Nano-dendrite Collision

    This scanning electron microscopy image depicts branched gold nanostructures (“nano-dendrites”) growing from planar microelectrode tips and crashing halfway, buckling upwards to create a third dimension of nano-features. The structures assemble from gold nanoparticles under the influence of an applied electric field, similar to how iron filings assemble under the influence of a magnetic field. The gold nanoparticle building blocks are 50nm in diameter – about 5000 times smaller than a human hair. The branched network formed by these nanostructures promotes incredible sensitivity for small molecule detection by means of Raman spectroscopy. At the QuSENS laboratory, and with the startup company Spectra Plasmonics Inc., we use these nanostructures to detect illicit drugs, pesticides, and explosives at ultralow and societally relevant concentrations.
    Submission Year: 
    2018-19
    Photographer's affiliation: 
    Graduate student
    Academic areas: 
    Smith Engineering
    Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs
    Photo: 
    Branched gold nanostructures
    Categories: 
    PhD student/candidate
    Smith Engineering
    Department of Chemical Engineering
    School of Graduate Studies
    Materials Discovery and Molecular Design
    Fundamental Principles of Nature: from Discovery to Application and Innovation
    Location of photograph: 
    Dupuis Hall, Queen's University
    Photographer's name: 
    Hannah Dies
    Display Photographers Affiltion + Faculty or Department: 
    MD/PhD Student, Chemical Engineering