scholarly journals Computed terahertz near-field mapping of molecular resonances of lactose stereo-isomer impurities with sub-attomole sensitivity

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kiwon Moon ◽  
Youngwoong Do ◽  
Hongkyu Park ◽  
Jeonghoi Kim ◽  
Hyuna Kang ◽  
...  

AbstractTerahertz near-field microscopy (THz-NFM) could locally probe low-energy molecular vibration dynamics below diffraction limits, showing promise to decipher intermolecular interactions of biomolecules and quantum matters with unique THz vibrational fingerprints. However, its realization has been impeded by low spatial and spectral resolutions and lack of theoretical models to quantitatively analyze near-field imaging. Here, we show that THz scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (THz s-SNOM) with a theoretical model can quantitatively measure and image such low-energy molecular interactions, permitting computed spectroscopic near-field mapping of THz molecular resonance spectra. Using crystalline-lactose stereo-isomer (anomer) mixtures (i.e., α-lactose (≥95%, w/w) and β-lactose (≤4%, w/w)), THz s-SNOM resolved local intermolecular vibrations of both anomers with enhanced spatial and spectral resolutions, yielding strong resonances to decipher conformational fingerprint of the trace β-anomer impurity. Its estimated sensitivity was ~0.147 attomoles in ~8 × 10−4 μm3 interaction volume. Our THz s-SNOM platform offers a new path for ultrasensitive molecular fingerprinting of complex mixtures of biomolecules or organic crystals with markedly enhanced spatio-spectral resolutions. This could open up significant possibilities of THz technology in many fields, including biology, chemistry and condensed matter physics as well as semiconductor industries where accurate quantitative mappings of trace isomer impurities are critical but still challenging.

Author(s):  
Jordan Frith

The phrase the Internet of things was originally coined in a 1999 presentation about attaching radio frequency identification (RFID) tags to individual objects. These tags would make the objects machine-readable, uniquely identifiable, and, most importantly, wirelessly communicative with infrastructure. This chapter evaluates RFID as a piece of mobile communicative infrastructure, and it examines two emerging forms: near-field communication (NFC) and Bluetooth low-energy beacons. The chapter shows how NFC and Bluetooth low-energy beacons may soon move some types of RFID to smartphones, in this way evolving the use of RFID in payment and transportation and enabling new practices of post-purchasing behaviors.


Author(s):  
Shiyong Li ◽  
Shuoguang Wang ◽  
Moeness G. Amin ◽  
Guoqiang Zhao

2010 ◽  
Vol 210 ◽  
pp. 012059
Author(s):  
S Vignolini ◽  
F Intonti ◽  
M Zani ◽  
F Riboli ◽  
D S Wiersma ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Anatoliy O. Boryssenko ◽  
Christophe Craeye ◽  
Daniel H. Schaubert

2005 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 014910 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Klein ◽  
P. Lahl ◽  
U. Poppe ◽  
F. Kadlec ◽  
P. Kužel

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