Chairs
| Ivan K. Schuller |
|
University of California-San Diego |
| Yvan Bruynseraede |
|
Catholic University Leuven |
| Kenneth S. Suslick |
|
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign |
| Scott R. Manalis |
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
* Invited paper
SESSION HH1: Perspectives on Research and Application Needs
Chair: Ivan Schuller
Tuesday Morning, March 29, 2005
Room 3014 (Moscone West)
9:00 AM Abstract Not Available. Harold Weinstock
9:30 AM *HH1.2
Frontiers in Integrated Nanosensors: Perspectives from the National Science Foundation. Arthur B. Ellis, Janice M. Hicks and Filbert J. Bartoli; National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA, Virginia.
10:00 AM *HH1.3
Integrated Nanosensors: Perspectives from DOE. Terry Michalske, Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
SESSION HH2: Sensing Techniques I
Chair: Yvan Bruynseraede
Tuesday Morning, March 29, 2005
Room 3014 (Moscone West)
10:30 AM *HH2.1
Cluster Beam Deposition of Nanostructured Arrays for Chemical
Sensing and High-Throughput Screening Applications. Paolo
Milani1, Emanuele Barborini1, Paolo
Piseri1, Gero Bongiorno1, Antonella Taurino2,
Pietro Siciliano2, Roberta Carbone3, Ida
Marangi3 and PierGiuseppe Pelicci3; 1Physics,
Universita, Milano, Italy; 2IMM, CNR, Lecce, Italy;
3Experimental Oncology, IEO, Milano, Italy.
11:00 AM *HH2.2
Porous Si Photonic Crystals as Sensors for Chemical Agents,
Viruses, and Bacteria. Michael J. Sailor1,
Michael P. Schwartz1, Sara D. Alvarez1,
Austin Derfus2, Benjamin Migliori3, Lin
Chao3 and Sangeeta N. Bhatia2; 1Department
of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California - San
Diego, La Jolla, California; 2Department of Bioengineering,
University of California - San Diego, La Jolla, California;
3Department of Biology, University of California
- San Diego, La Jolla, California.
11:30 AM *HH2.3
Immobilisation of Proteins by Size-Selected Nanoclusters
on Surfaces. Richard Edward Palmer, Nanoscale Physics
Research Laboratory, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United
Kingdom.
SESSION HH3: Sensing Techniques II
Chair: Michael Sailor
Tuesday Afternoon, March 29, 2005
Room 3014 (Moscone West)
1:30 PM HH3.1
Sensor Arrays Based on Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Structures.
Alexander Star, Vikram Joshi, David Thomas, Sergei Skarupo,
Jean-Christophe P Gabriel and Christian Valcke; Nanomix Inc,
Emeryville, California.
1:45 PM HH3.2
MOSFET Embedded Microcantilevers for Novel Electronic Detection
of on Chip Molecular Interactions. Soo-Hyun Tark1,
Gajendra Shekhawat2 and Vinayak Dravid3;
1Material Science and Engineering, Northwestern University,
Evanston, Illinois; 2Institute for Nanotechnology,
Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois; 3Material
Science and Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston,
Illinois.
2:00 PM HH3.3
Individually Addressable Conducting Polymer Nanowire Electrode
Junctions in a Sensor Array. Hsian-Rong Tseng, Molecular
& Medical Pharmacology, UCLA, Los Angeles, California.
2:15 PM HH3.4
Design Considerations of Solid State Devices for Integration
with Immobilized Ion Channels. Daniel Fine1,
Debarshi Basu1, Liang Wang1, Wolfgang
Knoll3, Ingo Koepper3, Joanna Long4,
Peter Anderson5, Randolph Duran2 and Ananth
Dodabalapur1; 1Microelectronics Research
Center, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas; 2George
and Josephine Butler Polymer Research Laboratories, Department
of Chemistry, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida; 3Max
Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Mainz, Germany; 4McKnight
Brain Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida;
5Whitney Marine Laboratory, University of Florida,
St. Augustine, Florida.
2:30 PM BREAK
SESSION HH4: Physical Sensors
Chair: Bernd Fruhberger
Tuesday Afternoon, March 29, 2005
Room 3014 (Moscone West)
3:00 PM *HH4.1
Spintronics Product Applications. Jim Daughton,
NVE Corporation, Eden Prairie, Minnesota.
3:30 PM *HH4.2
Infrared Sensors for Small Scale Focal Plane Arrays.
Gail J. Brown, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson
AFB, Ohio.
4:00 PM HH4.3
Composite Nanowire-Based Sensors for Magnetic Resonance Force
Microscopy. Mladen Barbic1 and Axel Scherer2;
1Physics and Astronomy, California State University,
Long Beach, Long Beach, California; 2Electrical Engineering,
Caltech, Pasadena, California.
4:15 PM HH4.4
Mass Sensitivity of Cantilever Based Mass Sensors as a Function
of Mass-Position. S. Dohn, R. Sandberg, W. Svendsen
and A. Boisen; MIC - Department of Micro and Nanotechnology,
Technical University of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark.
4:30 PM HH4.5
Dependence of Metallophthalocyanine Thin Film Structure on
Substrate Temperature and in situ Annealing. Casey Miller,
Amos Sharoni, Ge Liu, C. N. Colesniuc, Bernd Fruhberger and
Ivan K. Schuller; Physics, University of California, San Diego,
La Jolla, California.
SESSION HH5: Chemical Sensors
Chair: Andy Kummel
Wednesday Morning, March 30, 2005
Room 3014 (Moscone West)
8:30 AM *HH5.1
Metallophthalocyanine Chemosensors. William C. Trogler1,
Karla Miller1, Andrew C. Kummel1, Ivan
K. Schuller2, Michael Hale1, Forest
Bohrer1, Jeongwon Park1, Richard D.
Yang1, Casey Miller2, Ngoc Tran1
and Bernd Fruhberger2; 1Chemistry, University
of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California; 2Physics,
University of Californai, San Diego, La Jolla, California.
9:00 AM *HH5.2
Chemisorption Dynamics on Chemical Sensor Materials.
Andrew Kummel, University of California, San Diego, California.
9:30 AM *HH5.3
Adapting Molecules to Machines. Andrew Ellington,
Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of
Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas.
10:00 AM BREAK
10:30 AM HH5.4
Colorimetric Sensor Arrays: Applications and Miniaturization.
Ken Suslick, Michael Janzen, Jennifer B. Wilson and
Chen Zhang; Chemistry, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois.
10:45 AM HH5.5
Detection of Toxic Chemicals Using Polyaniline Nanofiber
Composite Sensor Arrays. Shabnam Virji1,2,
Christina Baker1, Dan Li1, Richard B.
Kaner1 and Bruce H. Weiller2; 1Chemistry
and Biochemistry, University of California, Los Angeles, Los
Angeles, California; 2Space Materials Laboratory,
The Aerospace Corporation, Los Angeles, California.
11:00 AM HH5.6
Integrated Tin Oxide Gas Sensor. Brian P. Mosher
and Taofang Zeng; North Carolina State University, Raleigh,
North Carolina.
11:15 AM HH5.7
Metallophthalocyanine (MPc) Thin-Film Field-Effect Transistors
(FET) for Chemical Selective Sensing. Richard Yang3,
Karla Miller1, Jeongwon Park3, Corneliu
Colesniuc2, Forest Bohrer1, Michael
Hale1, Bernd Fruhberger2, William Trogler1,
Ivan K. Schuller2 and Andrew C. Kummel1;
1Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California,
San Diego, La Jolla, California; 2Physics Department,
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California;
3Material Science and Engineering, University of
California, San Diego, La Jolla, California.
11:30 AM HH5.8
Chemical Selective Phthalocyanine Thin Film Sensors.
Richard Dengliang Yang1, Jeongwon Park1,
Karla A. Miller2, Forest Bohrer2, Michael
J. Hale2, Bernd Fruhberger2, William
C. Trogler2 and Andrew C. Kummel2; 1Materials
Science and Engineering Program, University of California,
San Diego, La Jolla, California; 2Department of
Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, San
Diego, La Jolla, California.
11:45 AM HH5.9
High Thermal Stability W2B Ohmic Contacts to ZnO Ozone
and pH Sensors. Lars Voss1, Kelly Ip1,
Rohit Khanna1, C. J. Kao2, I. Kravchenko3,
B. S. Kang3, F. Ren3, Y. W. Heo1,
D. P. Norton1, G. C. Chi2 and S. J.
Pearton1; 1Materials Science and Engineering,
University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida; 2Electrical
Engineering, National Central University, Chung-Li, Taiwan;
3Chemical Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville,
Florida.
SESSION HH6: Bio Sensors
Chair: A. Ellington
Wednesday Afternoon, March 30, 2005
Room 3014 (Moscone West)
1:30 PM *HH6.1
Multifunctional Cantilever Arrays for Chemical and Biological
Sensing. Martin Hegner1, Nataljia Backmann1,
Karin Gfeller1, Natalia Nugaeva1, Hans-Peter
Lang3,1, Alexander Bietsch3,1, Andreas
Plueckthun2 and Christoph Gerber3,1; 1Institute
of Physics, University of Basel, NCCR Nanoscale Science, Basel,
Switzerland; 2Dept. of Biochemistry, University of
Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; 3Cantilever Sensors,
IBM Research Laboratory Zurich, Ruschlikon, Switzerland.
2:00 PM *HH6.2
Encoded Nanostructures for Ultra Sensitive Detection of Proteins
and Nucleic Acids. Chad A. Mirkin and Dimitra Georganopoulou;
Chemistry, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois.
2:30 PM HH6.3
Highly Sensitive Polymer-Based Cantilever-Sensors for DNA
Detection. Montserrat Calleja1, Maria
Nordstrom2, Mar Alvarez1, Laura M. Lechuga1,
Anja Boisen2 and Javier Tamayo1; 1Biosensors
Group, CNM-CSIC, Tres Cantos, Spain; 2Dept. of Micro
and Nanotechnology, MIC-DTU, Lyngby, Denmark.
2:45 PM HH6.4
Multiplexed, Real-Time Detection of Cancer Marker Proteins
Using Nanowire Arrays. Gengfeng Zheng1,
Fernando Patolsky1 and Charles M. Lieber1,2;
1Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard
University, Cambridge, Massachusetts; 2Division of
Engineering and Applied Science, Harvard University, Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
3:00 PM BREAK
3:30 PM HH6.5
Simultaneous Detection of Insulin, Glucose and pH Using Nanosensor
Array. Souheil Zekri2, Arun Kumar1
and Ashok Kumar2; 1Nanomaterial and Nanomanufacturing
Research Center, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida;
2Department of Mechanical Engineering, University
of South Florida, Tampa, Florida.
3:45 PM HH6.6
Nanobiosensor for Cholesterol Detection. Arun Kumar1,
Thomas Gressle2 and Ashok Kumar2,1; 1Nanomaterial
and Nanomanufacturing Research Center, University of South Florida,
Tampa, Florida; 2Department of Mechanical Engineering,
University of South Florda, Tampa, Florida.
4:00 PM HH6.7
Applications of Biologically Functionalized Carbon Nanotubes.
Alan Dalton1,2, Rockford Draper2,
Inga Musselman2, Gregg Dieckmann2, Alfonso
Ortiz-Acevedo2, Vasiliki Zorbas2, Ray
Baughman2, Joe Razal2, Hui Xie2
and Steve Collins2; 1Department of Physics
and the UniS Materials Institute, University of Surrey, Guildford,
United Kingdom; 2Chemistry Department and the NanoTech
Institute, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas.
4:15 PM HH6.8
Detection of Protein-Protein Interactions in Nanochannels
Based on High Frequency Impedance Measurements. Markus
Loehndorf, Antonio Malave, Michael Tewes, Ivan Stoyanov
and Thomas Gronewold; CAESAR (Center of Advanced European Studies
and Research), Bonn, Germany.
SESSION HH7: Integration
Chair: Ken Suslick
Thursday Morning, March 31, 2005
Room 3014 (Moscone West)
9:00 AM *HH7.1
Flow Cytometry on a Chip for Biological Sensing. Yu-Hwa
Lo, Victor Lien and Nicole Justis; Electrical and Computer
Engineering, University of California-San Diego, La Jolla, California.
9:30 AM *HH7.2
Cantilever Based Sensing Devices with Integrated Read-Out
and Electronics. Anja Boisen, MIC - Department of
micro and nano technology, Technical University of Denmark,
Lyngby, Denmark.
10:00 AM BREAK
10:30 AM *HH7.3
Thin Films for Nanostructured Gas Sensors. Pietro Siciliano
and Mauro Epifani, Insitute for Microelectronics and
Microsystems IMM-CNR, Lecce, Italy.
11:00 AM *HH7.4
Nano- and Micropatterned Surfaces for Biointeractions.
Bengt Herbert Kasemo, Applied Physics, Chalmers University
of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden.
SESSION HH8: Applications
Chair: Yvan Bruynseraede
Thursday Afternoon, March 31, 2005
Room 3014 (Moscone West)
2:00 PM *HH8.1
Converging Technologies for Bioelectronic Applications.
S. Borghs, NEXT-ART, IMEC, Leuven, Belgium.
2:30 PM *HH8.2
Development of Nanomechanical Biosensors for Environmental
Control and Functional Genomics. Javier Tamayo, Biosensors
Group, CNM, CSIC, Tres Cantos, Madrid, Spain.
Symposium Organizers
Ivan K. Schuller
University of California-San Diego
Physics Dept.
La Jolla, CA 92093-0319
Tel: 858-534-2540 or -2531
Fax: 858-534-0173
ischuller@ucsd.edu |
Yvan Bruynseraede
Catholic University Leuven
Laboratory for Solid State
Physics and Magnetism
Celestijnenlaan 200 D
B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium
Tel: 32-16-327-277 or -184
Fax: 32-16-327-98 3
yvan.bruynseraede@fys.kuleuven.ac.be |
Kenneth S. Suslick
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
School of Chemical Sciences
Chemical and Life Sciences Bldg.
Rm. A422
600 S. Mathews Ave.
Urbana, IL 61801
Tel: 217-333-2794
Fax: 217-333-2685
ksuslick@uiuc.edu |
Scott R. Manalis
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Division of Biological Engineering
Media Laboratory
E15-422
20 Ames St.
Cambridge, MA 02139
Tel: 617-253-5039
Fax: 617-253-5102
scottm@media.mit.edu |
|