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Full-Text Articles in Optics
Using Second Harmonic Generation To Study Gram-Positive Bacterial Membranes, Lindsey N. Miller
Using Second Harmonic Generation To Study Gram-Positive Bacterial Membranes, Lindsey N. Miller
Doctoral Dissertations
Understanding how small-molecules, such as drugs, interact with bacterial membranes can quickly unravel into much more perplexing questions. No two bacterial species are alike, especially when comparing their membrane compositions which can even be altered by incorporating fatty acids from their surrounding environment into their lipid-membrane composition. To further complicate the comparison, discrete alterations in small-molecule structures can result in vastly different membrane-interaction outcomes, giving rise to the need for more "label-free" studies when analyzing drug mechanisms. The work presented in this dissertation highlights the benefits to using nonlinear spectroscopy and microscopy techniques for probing small-molecule interactions in living bacteria. …
Understanding The Plasmonic Properties Of Metallic Nanostructures With Correlated Photon- And Electron-Driven Excitations, Vighter Ozezinimize Iberi
Understanding The Plasmonic Properties Of Metallic Nanostructures With Correlated Photon- And Electron-Driven Excitations, Vighter Ozezinimize Iberi
Doctoral Dissertations
The collective oscillation of the conduction band electrons in metal nanostructures, known as plasmons, can be used to manipulate light on length scales that are smaller than the diffraction limit of visible light. In this dissertation, a correlated approach is used to probe localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPRs) in metallic nanostructures, and their application to surface-enhanced spectroscopy. This correlated approach involves the measurement of LSPRs with dark-field optical microscopy (resonance-Rayleigh scattering), and electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) in a scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM). Structural parameters of the exact same nanostructures obtained from the STEM are subsequently used in performing fully …