| People
- Faculty
- Professor (Adjunct):
Geoffrey F. Strouse |
| Field(s): |
Materials/Analytical Chemistry |
 |
| Email: |
strouse@chem.ucsb.edu |
| Phone: |
(805)
893-
5326 |
Fax:
(805)
893-
4120 |
| Office: |
3223 Chem |
 |
Selected
Publications |
 |
Go
to Research Group website |
| Bio: |
Dr. Strouse received his Ph.D. in 1993 from University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Before joining the faculty of UCSB in 1997, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Bern (Switzerland) and Los Alamos National Laboratory. |
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Current
Research
The
research effort can be divided into three primary areas: a)
Developing systematic routes for the preparation, assembly,
and characterization of nano-scale materials; b) Surface, defects,
and structural analysis of nanomaterials by correlated optical,
magnetic, mass spectroscopic, and thermodynamic spectroscopies;
and c) Analysis of coupled structural, magnetic or electronic
phase transitions in single crystal materials.
Synthesis:
The synthetic design team focuses on the development of synthetic
methodologies for preparation of new materials, ternary materials,
and industrially relevant synthetic methodologies. We have
demonstrated a novel crystal seeding methodology for the preparation
of high-yield, low-temperature grown nano-crystalline semiconductors
(2-10 nm, 5% rms batch, >5 g quantities) using molecular
cluster precursors that cleanly separate the nucleation event
from the growth step. We have extrapolated these strategies
to allow doping and production of ternary lattices of nanomaterials
with both phosphor and magnetic centers in both II-VI and
III-V materials.
Materials
Spectroscopy: The close interplay among charge, spin,
and lattice degrees of freedom in solid state materials is
widely believed to play an important role in the properties
of materials. For nanoscale materials the surface is also
fundamental to the behavior of materials. In our research
effort we have correlated the vibrational, structural, and
theoretical properties to explore the relationship between
structure and transport properties on varying length and time
scales for a range of classical solid state materials, CMR,
epasolites, and nanoscale materials. Analysis of vibrational,
pressure dependence, and photoluminescence data suggest three
specific confinement regimes in nanoscale systems. The regimes
correspond to the involvement of surface state perturbations
to core electronic levels in these materials. Magnetic and
optical studies on dilute magnetic semiconductors suggest
enhancement of magnetic superexchange between dopant ions
in confined system that arises from changes in the nature
of coupling in size-restricted materials.
Materials
Assembly: Our efforts on engineering next generation nano-material
assemblies through bio-scaffolding, organic assembly, or acid
base chemistry has allowed development of unique systems.
Bio-scaffolding targets the application of DNA, proteins,
or a combination of site-specific binding proteins and DNA
duplex structures for the assembly of nano-scale materials.
While the assembly of nanocomponents by DNA is not new, the
use of enzymes to control structure, and probe bio-activity
of these constructs is new. In conjunction with this effort,
we have explored the use of rigid rod oligomers based on polyacetylene
to connect individual nanomaterials and have analyzed the
energy transport properties of these systems. Recent studies
have shown potential for these materials as memory devices,
in fact, we have been able to generate optical write-read/
thermal erase memory images by taking advantage of changes
in the nature of energy transfer following thermal fluctuations
in the polymer assemblies. We have shown fine-control over
the production of polycrystalline mesocscopic lattice composed
of a 6:1 ratio of 5 nm Au and CdSe assembled using acid-base
equilibria. These materials possess unique opto-electronic
properties due to rapid carrier injection following photoexcitation
of the sub-components.
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| Selected
Research Publications |
| "Magnetic
Ordering in Doped Cd1-xCoxSe Diluted Magnetic Quantum Dots."
Hanif, K.M.; Meulenberg, R.W.; Strouse, G.F. J. Amer. Chem.
Soc., 124, 11495 (2002). |
| "Effects
of Alkylamine Chain Length on the Thermal Behavior of CdSe Quantum
Dot Glassy Films." Meulenberg, R.W.; Bryan, S.; Yun, C.S.;
Strouse, G.F. J. Phys. Chem B, 106, 7774-7780 (2002).
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| "Pressure
Induced Electronic Coupling in CdSe Semiconductor Quantum Dots."
Meulenberg, R.W.; Strouse, G.F. Phys. Rev. B, 66, 035317
(2002). |
| "Enzymatic
Modulation of DNA-Nanomaterial Constructs." Yun, C.S.;
Khitrov, G.A.; Vergona, D.E.; Reich, N.O.; Strouse, G.F. J.
Amer. Chem. Soc., 124, 7644-7645 (2002). |
| "Inorganic
Clusters as Single Source Precursors for Preparation of CdSe,
ZnSe, CdSe/ZnS Nanomaterials." Cumberland, S.L.; Hanif,
K.M.; Javier, A.; Khitrov, G.A.; Strouse, G.F.; Woessner, S.M.;
Yun, C.S. Chem. Mater., 14, 1576-1584 (2002). |
| "Mass
Spectrometry Analysis of the 1.5 nm Sphalerite-CdS core of [Cd32S14(SC6H5)36*DMF4]."
Gaumet, J.J.; Khitrov, G.A.; Strouse, G.F. Nano Lett.,
2, 375-379 (2002). |
| "Analysis
of the Nature of Oxyanion Adsorption on Gold Nanomaterial Surfaces."
Cumberland, S.L.; Strouse, G.F. Langmuir, 18, 269-276
(2002). |
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