Structural Investigation of Biological and Semiconductor Nanostructures with Nonlinear Multicontrast Microscopy

Physical and functional properties of advanced nano-composite materials and biological structures are determined by self-organized atoms and molecules into nanostructures and in turn by microscopic organization of the nanostructures into assemblies of higher structural complexity. Therefore, microsc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cisek, Richard
Other Authors: Barzda, Virginijus
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/43380
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-433802013-12-14T04:16:03ZStructural Investigation of Biological and Semiconductor Nanostructures with Nonlinear Multicontrast MicroscopyCisek, RichardNonlinear OpticsLaser Scanning MicroscopySemiconductor NanowiresStarch BiocrystalsSecond Harmonic GenerationThird Harmonic GenerationPolarization Harmonic MicroscopyImaging Photosynthetic Structures078607520609Physical and functional properties of advanced nano-composite materials and biological structures are determined by self-organized atoms and molecules into nanostructures and in turn by microscopic organization of the nanostructures into assemblies of higher structural complexity. Therefore, microscopes are indispensable tools for structural investigations at various levels of organization. In this work, novel nonlinear optical microscopy methods were developed to non-invasively study structural organization at the nanoscopic and microscopic levels. Atomic organization of semiconductor nanowires, molecular organization of amylose biocrystallites in starch granules, and microscopic organization of several photosynthetic organisms was elucidated. The structure of ZnSe nanowires, key components in many modern nanodevices, was investigated using polarization harmonic generation microscopy. Based on nonlinear optical properties of the different crystal lattices, zinc blende and wurtzite nanowires were differentiated, and the three-dimensional orientation of the zinc blende nanowires could be found. The structure of starch granules, a model biocrystal, important in food as well as health sciences, was also investigated using polarization harmonic microscopy. The study was combined with ab initio calculations using the crystal structures of amylose A and B, revealing that second harmonic signals originate from the hydroxide and hydrogen bonds in the starch granules. Visualization of several photosynthetic organisms including the green algae, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, two species of cyanobacteria, Leptolyngbya sp. and Anabaena sp., aggregates of light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes as well as chloroplasts from green plants were also explored, revealing that future nonlinear microscopy applications could include structural studies of cell walls, the Chlamydomonas eyespot, and photosynthetic membranes. In this study, several nonlinear optical microscopy modalities were developed for quantitative structural investigations of nano and micro-sized architectures. Non-invasive extraction of crystallographic information in microscopic samples will have a number of potential benefits, for example, in clinical applications, allowing observations of disease states inside tissues without the need for biopsy. Industrial nanotechnology will benefit from fast determination of nanostructures with nonlinear microscopy that will improve quality of nanodevices.Barzda, Virginijus2012-112013-12-12T18:09:07ZWITHHELD_ONE_YEAR2013-12-12T18:09:07Z2013-12-12Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/43380en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Nonlinear Optics
Laser Scanning Microscopy
Semiconductor Nanowires
Starch Biocrystals
Second Harmonic Generation
Third Harmonic Generation
Polarization Harmonic Microscopy
Imaging Photosynthetic Structures
0786
0752
0609
spellingShingle Nonlinear Optics
Laser Scanning Microscopy
Semiconductor Nanowires
Starch Biocrystals
Second Harmonic Generation
Third Harmonic Generation
Polarization Harmonic Microscopy
Imaging Photosynthetic Structures
0786
0752
0609
Cisek, Richard
Structural Investigation of Biological and Semiconductor Nanostructures with Nonlinear Multicontrast Microscopy
description Physical and functional properties of advanced nano-composite materials and biological structures are determined by self-organized atoms and molecules into nanostructures and in turn by microscopic organization of the nanostructures into assemblies of higher structural complexity. Therefore, microscopes are indispensable tools for structural investigations at various levels of organization. In this work, novel nonlinear optical microscopy methods were developed to non-invasively study structural organization at the nanoscopic and microscopic levels. Atomic organization of semiconductor nanowires, molecular organization of amylose biocrystallites in starch granules, and microscopic organization of several photosynthetic organisms was elucidated. The structure of ZnSe nanowires, key components in many modern nanodevices, was investigated using polarization harmonic generation microscopy. Based on nonlinear optical properties of the different crystal lattices, zinc blende and wurtzite nanowires were differentiated, and the three-dimensional orientation of the zinc blende nanowires could be found. The structure of starch granules, a model biocrystal, important in food as well as health sciences, was also investigated using polarization harmonic microscopy. The study was combined with ab initio calculations using the crystal structures of amylose A and B, revealing that second harmonic signals originate from the hydroxide and hydrogen bonds in the starch granules. Visualization of several photosynthetic organisms including the green algae, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, two species of cyanobacteria, Leptolyngbya sp. and Anabaena sp., aggregates of light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes as well as chloroplasts from green plants were also explored, revealing that future nonlinear microscopy applications could include structural studies of cell walls, the Chlamydomonas eyespot, and photosynthetic membranes. In this study, several nonlinear optical microscopy modalities were developed for quantitative structural investigations of nano and micro-sized architectures. Non-invasive extraction of crystallographic information in microscopic samples will have a number of potential benefits, for example, in clinical applications, allowing observations of disease states inside tissues without the need for biopsy. Industrial nanotechnology will benefit from fast determination of nanostructures with nonlinear microscopy that will improve quality of nanodevices.
author2 Barzda, Virginijus
author_facet Barzda, Virginijus
Cisek, Richard
author Cisek, Richard
author_sort Cisek, Richard
title Structural Investigation of Biological and Semiconductor Nanostructures with Nonlinear Multicontrast Microscopy
title_short Structural Investigation of Biological and Semiconductor Nanostructures with Nonlinear Multicontrast Microscopy
title_full Structural Investigation of Biological and Semiconductor Nanostructures with Nonlinear Multicontrast Microscopy
title_fullStr Structural Investigation of Biological and Semiconductor Nanostructures with Nonlinear Multicontrast Microscopy
title_full_unstemmed Structural Investigation of Biological and Semiconductor Nanostructures with Nonlinear Multicontrast Microscopy
title_sort structural investigation of biological and semiconductor nanostructures with nonlinear multicontrast microscopy
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/43380
work_keys_str_mv AT cisekrichard structuralinvestigationofbiologicalandsemiconductornanostructureswithnonlinearmulticontrastmicroscopy
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