Foundations of Nanoscience: Self-Assembled
Architectures and Devices (FNANO)
April 21-23, 2004 Snowbird
Cliff Lodge, Snowbird, UT
Conference Sponsorship: Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA)
FNANO04 Conference
Webpage: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/FNANO04/
Conference Schedule Webpage: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~reif/FNANO/FNANO04/schedule.html
FNANO
Conference Chair: John H Reif <
>
Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC 919-660-6568
FNANO
Conference Program Committee:
Leonard Adleman
<adleman@usc.edu>, University of Southern California. Los Angeles, CA
Karl Bohringer
<karl@ee.washington.edu>, Department of Electrical Engineering,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
James R.
Heath <heath@caltech.edu>, California Institute of Technology, Los
Angeles, CA
Michael Hecht
<hecht@princeton.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Princeton University,
Princeton, NJ
Homme Hellinga
<hwh@biochem.duke.edu>, Department of Biochemistry, Duke University,
Durham, NC
Philip J. Kuekes
<kuekes@hpl.hp.com>, Hewlett-Packard Corporation, Palo Alto, CA
Sri Kumar
<skumar@darpa.mil>, Information Processing Technology Office(IPTO), Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA), Arlington, VI
Kwan Kwok
<kkwok@darpa.mil>, Microsystems Technology Office (MTO), Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA), Arlington, VI
Jie Liu <j.liu@duke.edu>,
Department of Chemistry, Duke University, Durham, NC
John H. Reif <
>
(Chair), Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC
George C. Schatz
<schatz@chem.northwestern.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Northwestern
University, Evanston, IL
Nadrian Seeman
<ncs1@feynman.acf.nyu.edu>, Department of Chemistry, New York University,
New York, NY
Lloyd Smith
<smith@chem.wisc.edu>, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
Andrew
Turberfield <a.turberfield@physics.ox.ac.uk>, Department of Physics,
Oxford University, Oxford UK
R. Stanley Williams
<stan_williams@hp.com>, Hewlett-Packard Corporation, Palo Alto, CA
Conference
Reception: Golden Cliff Room
(7:00 PM-9:00 PM April 20)
Conference Schedule Wednesday, April 21, 2004
Continental
Breakfast: Outside Ballroom 1
(7:30 AM-8:00 AM April 21)
Opening
of FNANO Conference & Announcements: Ballroom 1 (8:00 AM-8:05 AM April 21)
John H. Reif, Conference Chair
FNANO
Track on Self-Assembled DNA Nanostructures, Session A: Ballroom 1 (8:05 AM - 9:25 AM April 21)
Track
Chair: Nadrian Seeman
<ncs1@feynman.acf.nyu.edu>, Department of Chemistry, New York University,
New York, NY
4
Invited Talks:
-
Building Blocks for DNA Self-Assembly (8:05 AM-8:25 AM)
Yuriy Brun <ybrun@usc.edu>, Laboratory for Molecular Science, University of
Southern California. Los Angeles, CA
-
Self-Assembly of Nanoparticle Arrays by DNA Scaffolding (8:25 AM-8:45 AM)
Richard A.
Kiehl <kiehl001@umn.edu>, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities,
Minneapolis, MN
-
Hierarchical and Serial DNA Self-Assemblies (8:45 AM-9:05 AM)
Thom LaBean <thl@cs.duke.edu>, Department
of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC
-
Self-assembly of DNA triangles (9:05 AM-9:25 AM)
Chengde Mao
<mao@purdue.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette,
IN
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (9:25
AM-9:35 AM April 21)
FNANO
Track on Self-Assembled DNA Nanostructures, Session B: Ballroom 1 (9:35 AM - 10:55 AM April 21)
Track
Chair: Nadrian Seeman
4
Invited Talks:
-
DNA-mediated nano-hybrid-materials (9:35 AM - 9:55 AM)
Wolfgang Parak
<wolfgang.parak@physik.uni-muenchen.de>, Ludwig Maximilians Universitaet
Muenchen,Muenchen, Germany
-
DNA Sierpinski Triangles and DNA nanotubes (9:55 AM - 10:15 AM)
Paul Rothemund
<pwkr@dna.caltech.edu>, California Institute of Technology, Los Angeles,
CA
-
An aptamer-based DNA nanomachine (10:15 AM - 10:35 AM)
Friedrich Simmel
<friedrich.simmel@physik.uni-muenchen.de>, Munich University, Muenchen,
Germany
-
A Clonable DNA Nano-Octahedron (10:35 AM - 10:55 AM)
William M. Shih
<wmshih@scripps.edu>, Department of Chemistry, The Scripps Research
Institute, La Jolla, CA
Refreshment Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (10:55 AM-11:05 AM April 21)
FNANO
Track on Principles and Theory of Self-Assembly, Session A: Ballroom 1 (11:05 AM –12:25 PM April 21)
Track
Chair: Leonard Adleman
<adleman@usc.edu>, Laboratory for Molecular
Science, University of Southern California. Los Angeles, CA
4
Invited Talks:
-
Phase Transitions and Control in Self Assembly (11:05 AM –11:25 PM)
Ed Coffman
<egc@ee.columbia.edu>, Department of Computer Science, Columbia
University, NY City, NY
-
Self assembling by DNA junction molecules: the theoretical model (11:25 AM
–11:45 PM)
Natasha Jonoska
<jonoska@math.usf.edu>, Department of Mathematics, University of Southern
Florida, Tampa FL
-
Directed Self-Assembly Using Graph Grammars (11:45 AM –12:05 PM)
Eric Klavins
<klavins@ee.washington.edu>, Dept of Electrical Engineering, University
of Washington, Seattle, WA
-
Flux systems, flows and self-assembly (12:05 PM –12:25 PM)
Grzegorz Rozenberg
<rozenber@liacs.nl>, Leiden Institute for Advanced Computer Science,
Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherland
Lunch:
Golden Cliff Room (12:25
PM-1:10 PM April 21)
Principles
and Theory of Self-Assembly Track Chair Overview Talk: Golden Cliff Room:
- Toward a general
theory of Self-assembly (12:35 PM-1:05 PM)
Leonard
Adleman <adleman@usc.edu>, Laboratory for Molecular Science,
University of Southern California. Los Angeles, CA
FNANO
Track on Principles and Theory of Self-Assembly, Session B: Error Correction: Ballroom 1 (1:10 PM -2:10 PM April 21)
Track
Chair: Leonard Adleman
3
Invited Talks:
-
Errors and Error-correction in Algorithmic Self-Assembly (1:10 PM-1:30 PM)
Erik Winfree
<winfree@caltech.edu>, Department of Computer Science, and Department of
Computation and Neural Systems, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA
-
Optimal Self-Assembly of Counters at Temperature Two (1:30 PM-1:50 PM)
Ashish Goel
<ashishg@stanford.edu> (speaker), Qi Cheng and Pablo Moisset de Espanes,
Department of Management Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford
CA
-
Compact Error-Resilient Computational DNA Tiling Assemblies (1:50 PM-2:10 PM)
John H. Reif <
>, Sudheer Sahu
<sudheer@cs.duke.edu> (speaker) and Peng
Yin <py@cs.duke.edu>, Department of Computer Science, Duke
University, Durham, NC
Refreshment Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (2:10 PM –2:20 PM April 21)
FNANO
Track on DNA-Metal Aggregates, Session A: Ballroom 1 (2:20
PM –3:40 PM April 21)
Track
Chair: George C. Schatz
<schatz@chem.northwestern.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Northwestern
University, Evanston IL
4
Invited Talks:
-
DNA directed assembly of nanocrystals (2:20 PM –2:40 PM)
Yi Cui
<ycui@uclink.berkeley.edu> (speaker) and Paul Alivisatos
<alivis@uclink4.berkeley.edu>, University of California, Berkeley, CA
-
Nanopearls: A new synthesis for programmably creating Biochemical-Nanoparticle
linear sequences and applications (2:40 PM –3:00 PM)
Joe Jacobson <jacobson@media.mit.edu>, Media Lab, MIT, Cambridge, MA (with Shuguang Zhang <shuguang@mit.edu>, Center for Biomedical Engineering)
-
DNAzyme-Directed Assembly of Nanoparticles and its Application as Colorimetric
Sensors for a Broad Range of Analytes (3:00 PM –3:20 PM)
Yi Lu <yi-lu@uiuc.edu>, Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL
-
Self-Assembly Driven Metallization of DNA-Templated Nanowires (3:20 PM
–3:40 PM)
Oliver
Harnack <harnack@sony.de>, Materials Science Laboratories, Sony
International (Europe) GmbH, Stuttgart, Germany
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (3:40 PM –3:50 PM April 21)
FNANO
Track on DNA-Metal Aggregates, Session B: Ballroom 1 (3:50 PM - 4:50 PM April 21)
Track
Chair: George C. Schatz
<schatz@chem.northwestern.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Northwestern
University, Evanston IL
3
Invited Talks:
-
DNA-based fabrication of metallic wires and networks (3:50 PM - 4:10 PM)
Michael Mertig <mertig@tmfs.mpgfk.tu-dresden.de>,
Institut fr Werkstoffwissenschaft, Technische Universitt Dresden, Dresden,
Germany
-
Polymer-Gold Aggregates (4:10 PM - 4:30 PM)
Sungho Park
<spark72@chem.northwestern.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Northwestern
University, Evanston IL
-
Transistor in a Test Tube - Harnessing Molecular Biology to the Self-Assembly
of Functional Electronics (4:30 PM - 4:50 PM)
Uri Sivan <phsivan@tx.technion.ac.il>,
Department of Physics, Technion, Haifa, Israel
Refreshment Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (4:50 PM –5:00 PM April 21)
FNANO
Track on Molecular Electronic & Quantum Devices, Session A: Ballroom 1 (5:00 PM-6:00 PM April 21)
Track coChairs:
James R.
Heath <heath@caltech.edu>, California Institute of Technology, Los
Angeles, CA and
Kwan Kwok
<kkwok@darpa.mil>, Microsystems Technology Office (MTO), Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA), Arlington, VI
3
Invited Talks:
-
Carbon Nanotube Electronics (5:00 PM-5:20 PM)
Hongjie Dai
<hdai1@stanford.edu> (speaker) and Ali
Javey, Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, CA
-
STM spectroscopy on free-standing carbon nanotubes (5:20 PM-5:40 PM)
Cees Dekker
<dekker@mb.tn.tudelft.nl>, Delft University of Technology, Department of
Applied Physics, The Netherlands
-
Four Unimolecular Rectifiers and What Lies Ahead (5:40 PM-6:00 PM)
R. Metzger
<rmetzger@bama.ua.edu>, Chemistry Department, University of Alabama,
Tuscaloosa, AL
Reception:
Golden Cliff Room (6:00 PM-6:30
PM April 21)
Dinner Buffet: Golden Cliff Room (6:45 PM-8:00 PM
April 21)
Self-Assembled
DNA Nanostructures Track Chair Overview Talk: Golden Cliff Room
- Not Just the Secret
of Life (7:00 PM-7:30 PM)
Nadrian Seeman
<ncs1@feynman.acf.nyu.edu>, Department of Chemistry, New York University, New York, NY
DNA-Metal
Aggregates Track Chair Overview Talk: Golden Cliff Room
- Cooperative DNA Melting
in DNA Linked Gold Nanoparticle Aggregates (7:30
PM-8:00 PM)
George
C. Schatz <schatz@chem.northwestern.edu>, Department of Chemistry,
Northwestern University, Evanston IL (paper by Hai Long, Maodu Chen, and George C.
Schatz)
NSF Workshop
on Self-Assembled Architectures,
Evening Session
A: Solicitation of Ideas for New Research
Challenges
Golden
Cliff Room (8:00 PM-9:00 PM April 21)
coChairs:
John H. Reif <
>, Duke
University and
K. Birgitta
Whaley <whaley@socrates.berkeley.edu>, Department of Chemistry,
University of California, Berkeley, CA
Greetings
& Overview: John
H. Reif (8:00 PM-8:05 PM)
Dessert (8:05 –8:30 PM)
Open
Session on Proposals for New Research Challenges in Self-Assembled
Nanostructures Led by NSF Workshop Panel (8:05 PM-9:30)
Conference Schedule Thursday, April 22, 2004
Continental
Breakfast: Outside Ballroom 1
(7:30 AM - 8:00 AM April 22)
FNANO
Track on Molecular Electronic & Quantum Devices, Session B: Ballroom 1 (8:00 AM- 11:15 AM April 22)
Track
coChairs:
James R.
Heath <heath@caltech.edu>, California Institute of Technology, Los
Angeles, CA and
Kwan Kwok
<kkwok@darpa.mil>, Microsystems Technology Office (MTO), Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA), Arlington, VI
9
Invited Talks:
-
Hybrid Semiconductor/Molecular Devices (8:00 AM- 8:20 AM)
David Bocian <david.bocian@ucr.edu>,
University of California at Riverside, Riverside, CA
-
Polymer Nanofiber Based Devices (8:20 AM- 8:40 AM)
Harold G. Craighead
<hgc1@cornell.edu>, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
-
Building Block Approaches to Molecular Nanomagnets (8:40 AM- 9:00 AM)
Kim Dunbar
<dunbar@mail.chem.tamu.edu>, Dept. of Chemistry, Texas A&M
University, College Station, TX
-
Silicon contacts: A new playground for molecular electronics? (9:00 AM- 9:20
AM)
Avik Ghosh
<ghosha@ecn.purdue.edu>, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
-
Self-Assembly and Lithographic Patterning of DNA Rafts (9:20 AM- 9:40 AM)
Marya Lieberman <mlieberm@nd.edu>, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (9:40 AM -9:55 AM April 22)
-
In-wire Molecular Electronic Devices: Synthesis and Electrical Characterization
(9:55 AM- 10:15 AM)
Theresa Mayer <tsm2@psu.edu>,
Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA
-
Molecular Meccano and Molecular Electronics (10:15 AM- 10:35 AM)
Fraser
Stoddart <stoddart@chem.ucla.edu>, UCLA & California NanoSystems
Institute(CNSI), Los Angeles, CA
-
Synthesis and Self-Assembly of Nanostructures (10:35 AM- 10:55 AM)
Younan
Xia <xia@chem.washington.edu>,
Department of Chemistry, University
of Washington, Seattle, WA
-
Design of Magnetic Spinel Ferrite Nanoparticles for Biological Applications
(10:55 AM – 11:15 AM)
John Zhang
<john.zhang@chemistry.gatech.edu>, School of Chemistry &
Biochemistry, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (11:15 AM -11:30 AM April 22)
FNANO
Track on Molecular Electronics & Quantum Devices, Session C: Ballroom 1 (11:10 AM - 12:30 PM April 22)
Track
coChairs: James R.
Heath and Kwan Kwok
3
Invited Talks:
-
Some Issues of Junction Dynamics (11:30 AM - 11:50 AM)
Mark Ratner <ratner@chem.northwestern.edu>,
Chemistry Department, Northwestern University, Evanston Il
-
Tunneling Spectroscopy of Self-Assembled Monolayers (11:50 AM - 12:10 PM)
Mark Reed
<mark.reed@yale.edu>, Department of Electrical Engineering, Yale University,
New Haven, CT
-
Molecular Electronics: NanoCell Electronic Memories and Direct Covalent
Attachment of Molecules to Oxide-Free Silicon for Construction of Hybrid
Devices (12:10 PM - 12:30 PM)
James Tour <tour@rice.edu>, Department
of Chemistry, Rice University, Houston, TX
Lunch:
Golden Cliff Room (12:30 PM
-1:20 PM April 22)
Molecular
Electronic & Quantum Devices Track Chair Overview Talk: Golden Cliff Room
Molecular
Mechanics & Electronics (12:40 PM - 1:10 PM)
James R.
Heath <heath@caltech.edu>, California Institute of Technology, Los
Angeles, CA
FNANO
Track on Molecular Electronics & Quantum Devices, Session D: Quantum Computing
Devices: Ballroom 1 (1:20 PM - 2:20 PM April 22)
Track coChairs: James R.
Heath and Kwan Kwok
3
Invited Talks:
-
Molecular Wiring of Semiconductor Nanostructures for Quantum Information
Processing (1:20 PM - 1:40 PM)
David
Awschalom <awsch@physics.ucsb.edu> and
Min Ouyang <ouyang@iquest.ucsb.edu> (speaker),
Department of Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA
-
Molecular Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (1:40 PM - 2:00 PM)
Craig Lent
<lent@nd.edu>, Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Notre
Dame, Notre Dame, IN
-
Quantum Computation with Endohedral Fullerenes (2:00 PM - 2:20 PM)
Jason Twamley
<Jason.Twamley@may.ie>, Department of Mathematical Physics, National
University of Ireland Maynooth, Kildare, Ireland
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (2:20 PM - 2:30 AM April 22)
FNANO
Track on Peptide and Viral Self-Assembly: Ballroom 1 (2:30
PM - 4:30 PM April 22)
Track
Chair: Michael Hecht
<hecht@princeton.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Princeton University,
Princeton, NJ
6 Invited
Talks:
- Virus-Based Genetic
Toolkit for the Directed Synthesis of Magnetic and Semiconducting Nanowires (2:30 PM - 2:50
PM)
Angela Belcher <belcher@mit.edu>, MIT, Cambridge, MA
-
Chemical and Genetic Tailoring of Virus Particles to Achieve Nanochemical
Function (2:50 PM - 3:10 PM)
M.G Finn <mgfinn@scripps.edu>, Department of Chemistry and The Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA
-
Self-Assembled Viruses as Nanocontainers (3:10
PM - 3:30 PM)
William Gelbart <gelbart@chem.ucla.edu>, Department of Chemistry, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA
-Assembly
and Functionization of an Icosahedral Virus (3:30 PM - 3:50
PM)
Tianwei Lin <twlin@scripps.edu>, Scripps Institute, La Jolla, CA -Tianwei Lin <twlin@scripps.edu>, Scripps Institute, La Jolla, CA
-
Peptide and Biomimetic Catalysts for Structure-Directed Nanofabrication of
Siloxanes, Organometallics and Metallo-oxanes (3:50 PM - 4:10 PM)
Daniel Morse
<d_morse@lifesci.ucsb.edu>, Department of Molecular, Cellular and
Developmental Biology, UC Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA
-
Molecular Biometics: Building Materials via the Natures's Way, One Molecule at
a Time (4:10 PM - 4:30 PM)
Mehmet
Sarikaya <sarikaya@u.washington.edu>, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (4:30 PM-4:40 PM April 22)
FNANO
Track on Molecular Motors, Session A: Ballroom
1 (4:40 PM-6:00 PM April 22)
Track
Chair: Andrew
Turberfield <a.turberfield@physics.ox.ac.uk>, Department of Physics,
Oxford University, Oxford UK
4
Invited Talks:
-
Rotaxane- and Catenane-based Molecular Machines and Motors (4:40 PM-5:00 PM)
Alberto Credi <acredi@ciam.unibo.it>, Department of Chemistry, University of Bologna, Italy
-
Artificial Surface-Mounted Molecular Rotors (5:00 PM-5:20 PM)
Josef Michl <michl@eefus.colorado.edu>, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
-
DNA Nanoactuator in Self-assembly (5:20
PM-5:40 PM)
Hao Yan <hy1@cs.duke.edu>,
Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC
-
Autonomous DNA Motors and Computing Machines: Experimental Study and
Theoretical Constructions (5:40 PM-6:00 PM)
Peng Yin
<py@cs.duke.edu> (speaker), Andrew
Turberfield <a.turberfield@physics.ox.ac.uk>(Department of Physics,
Oxford University, Oxford UK), Hao Yan <hy1@cs.duke.edu>, John H. Reif <
>, Department of Computer Science, Duke
University, Durham, NC
Conference Schedule Thursday Evening, April 22,
2004
Reception
& Poster Session: Golden
Cliff Room (6:00 PM -6:45 PM April 22)
16
Posters:
DNA
Computation Times
Yuliy Baryshnikov
<ymb@research.bell-labs.com>, Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies, Murray
Hill, NJ
Assembly
and electrical properties of nanomaterials
Sung-Wook Chung
<schung@chem.northwestern.edu>, Department of Chemistry & Institute
for Nanotechnology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL
Parallel
Computer Architectures Enabled by Self-Assembly
Chris Dwyer <dwyer@ece.duke.edu>,
Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC
Redox-Controllable
Shuttling in Bistable [2]Rotaxanes
Alberto Di Fabio
<adifabio@ciam.unibo.it>, Department of Chemistry,
University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy
Atomic
Force Microscopy Movies and Measurements of DNA Crystals
Rizal F. Hariadi
<hariadi@dna.caltech.edu>, Department of Computer Science, and Department
of Computation and Neural Systems, California Institute of Technology,
Pasadena, CA
CAD
Support for DNA-Guided Self-Assembly of Nanoelectronics
Vijeta Johri <vijeta@cs.duke.edu>, Department of Computer
Science, Duke University, Durham, NC
Active
and Dynamic Nanomaterials Using Kinesin and Microtubules
Steven John Koch
<sjkoch@sandia.gov>, Biomolecular Materials and Interfaces, Sandia
National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM
Paradigms
for computational nucleic acid design
Robert M. Dirks <dirks@caltech.edu>,
Milo Lin
<milo@dna.caltech.edu>, Erik
Winfree <winfree@caltech.edu>, and Niles A. Pierce
<niles@caltech.edu>, Applied & Computational Mathematics, California
Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA
Effect
of Corrugating Schemes on the Morphologies of DNA Lattices
Sung Ha Park
<spark@phy.duke.edu>, Department of Physics, Duke University, Durham, NC
NANA:
Nano-scale Active Network Architecture
Jaidev Patwardhan
<jaidev@cs.duke.edu>, Department of Computer Science, Duke University,
Durham, NC
Patterning
of DNA using molecular liftoff methodology
Koshala Sarveswaran
<ksarvesw@nd.edu>, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University
of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN
DNA Hybridization
Catalysts and Catalyst Circuits
Georg Seelig
<seelig@dna.caltech.edu>, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena,
CA
Efficient
Algorithms for Multistranded Stochastic Kinetic Simulation
Joseph Schaeffer
<schaeffer@dna.caltech.edu>, Department of Computer Science, and
Department of Computation and Neural Systems, California Institute of
Technology, Pasadena, CA
Rewritable
memory by controllable nanopatterning of DNA
Jong-Shik Shin
<enzymo@acm.caltech.edu> and Niles A. Pierce, <niles@caltech.edu>,
Applied & Computational Mathematics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA
Immobilization
of DNAzymes for Sensitive Pb2+ Sensors
Daryl P. Wernette
<dwernett@uiuc.edu>, Juewen Liu and Yi Lu, University of Illinois -
Urbana Champaign, Urbana, IL
Spin-Dependent Transport in
Nanoscale Systems
K. Birgitta Whaley
<whaley@socrates.berkeley.edu>, Joshua Schrier
<schrier@holmium.cchem.berkeley.edu> and Laxmidhar Senapati
<senapl@holmium.cchem.berkeley.edu>, Department
of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, CA
Executive Meeting for Track Chairs: (6:00 PM -6:45 PM April 22)
Agenda: Discussion of plans for future years & Topics for NSF Programs in
Self-Assembled Nanostructures
Dinner:
Golden Cliff Room (6:45 PM
-8:00 PM April 22)
Peptide
and Viral Self-Assembly Track Chair Overview Talk: Golden Cliff Room
-
Structures and Functions of De
Novo Proteins from Designed Combinatorial Libraries (7:00 PM-7:30
PM)
Michael Hecht
<hecht@princeton.edu> Department of Chemistry, Princeton University,
Princeton, NJ
Molecular Motors Track Chair Overview Talk: Golden Cliff Room
Nanomachines
made from DNA (7:30 PM – 8:00 PM)
Andrew
Turberfield <a.turberfield@physics.ox.ac.uk>, Department of Physics,
Oxford University, Oxford UK
NSF Workshop
on Self-Assembled Architectures,
Evening Session B: Overviews of Study Group Reports
Golden
Cliff Room (8:00 PM-9:00 PM
April 22)
coChairs:
John
H. Reif <
>, Duke
University and K. Birgitta
Whaley <whaley@socrates.berkeley.edu>, Department of Chemistry,
University of California, Berkeley, CA
Greetings
& Overview: John H. Reif
Golden
Cliff Room (8:00 PM-8:05 PM April 21)
Dessert (8:05
PM-8:30 PM April 22)
Overviews by Track Chairs of Study Group Reports on Topics for New Research Challenges
in Self-Assembled Nanostructures:
Golden Cliff Room (8:05 PM-9:00 PM)
Each
Track Chair will give a 5-minute presentation
of New Research Challenges in their Track area:
-Principles
and Theory of Self-Assembly (Leonard
Adleman)
-Molecular
Self-Assembly (Nadrian
Seeman)
-Self-Assembled
Molecular Electronic Quantum Devices (James R. Heath)
-Self-Assembled
Molecular Electronics & Quantum Architectures (Philip J. Kuekes
& R. Stanley
Williams)
-Self-Assembled
Fullerene Nanostructures (Jie Liu)
-Conformal, Magnetic,
Electrostatic & Hydophobic-Hydrophilic Self-Assembly (Karl Bohringer)
-Self-Assembled
DNA-Metal Aggregates (George C. Schatz)
-Self-Assembled
Surface Chemistry (Lloyd Smith)
-Peptide
and Viral Self-Assembly (Michael
Hecht)
-Self-Assembled
Autonomous Molecular Devices (Andrew
Turberfield)
-Self-Assembled
Molecular Sensors (Homme
Hellinga)
Round-Table
Discussion by Program Managers of Existing Funding Programs & Proposed
Plans for New Funding Programs
Golden
Cliff Room (9:00 PM-9:30 PM April 22)
coChairs:
Sri Kumar
<skumar@darpa.mil>, Information Processing Technology Office(IPTO), Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA), Arlington, VI and
Mitra Basu
<mbasu@nsf.gov>, Division of Computing and
Communication Foundations, Directorate for Computer and Information
Science and Engineering(CISE),
National Science Foundation(NSF),
Arlington, VI
Other Round-Table Members:
-Steven Ho <sho@darpa.mil>, Defense Sciences Office (DSO), Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA), Arlington, VI
-Kwan Kwok<kkwok@darpa.mil>
Microsystems Technology Office (MTO),
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA),
Arlington, VI
-Thomas
Renz <thomas.renz@rl.af.mil>, Information Directorate, Air Force Rome
Labs(AFRL), Rome, NY
-Nikzad
(Benny) Toomarian <nikzad.toomarian@jpl.nasa.gov>, Bio-Nano
Technology Office, Life Detection Science & Technology Program, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California
Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA
Conference Schedule Friday, April 23, 2004
Continental
Breakfast: Outside Ballroom 1
(7:00 AM -7:30 AM April 23)
FNANO
Track on Molecular Motors, Session B: Ballroom
1 (7:30 AM - 8:10 AM April 23)
Track
Chair: Andrew
Turberfield <a.turberfield@physics.ox.ac.uk>, Department of Physics,
Oxford University, Oxford UK
2
Invited Talks:
-
Nanodevices integrating biomolecular motors (7:30 AM - 7:50 AM)
Henry Hess
<hhess@u.washington.edu>, Department of Bioengineering, University of
Washington, Seattle, WA
-
Construction of micro belt conveyers: two approaches (7:50 AM - 8:10 AM)
Taro Uyeda
<t-uyeda@aist.go.jp>, Gene Function Research Center, Tsukuba Central,
Ibaraki, Japan
FNANO
Track on Molecular Sensors
(8:10 AM - 9:40 AM April 23)
Track
Chair: Homme Hellinga
<hwh@biochem.duke.edu>, Department of Biochemistry, Duke University,
Durham, NC
Track
Chair Overview Talk:
-
Computational design of protein-based biosensors (8:10 AM -8:40 AM)
3
Invited Talks:
-
Massive Self-Assembly of Carbon Nanotube-Based Integrated Sensor Structures
(8:40 AM -9:00 AM)
Seunghun
Hong <shong@phy.fsu.edu>, Department of Physics, Florida State
University
-
Nanodevices based on linear
protein molecular motors: Challenges and opportunities (9:00 AM -9:20 AM)
Dan Nicolau <dnicolau@swin.edu.au>,
Swinburne Industrial Research Institute, Swinburne University of Technology,
Swinburne, Australia
-
S-layers as patterning elements for supramolecular structures (9:20 AM -9:40
AM)
Dietmar
Pum <dietmar.pum@boku.ac.at>(speaker) and Uwe
Bernd Sleytr <uwe.sleytr@boku.ac.at>, Center for
Ultrastructure Research, University of Natural Resources and Applied Life
Sciences, Gregor Mendel-Strasse 33, A-1180 Wien, Austria
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (9:40
AM - 9:50 AM April 23)
FNANO
Track on Conformal, Magnetic, Electrostatic & Hydophobic-Hydrophilic
Self-Assembly: Ballroom 1 (9:50
AM - 11:20 AM April 23)
Track
Chair: Karl Bohringer
<karl@ee.washington.edu>, Department of Electrical Engineering,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Track
Chair Overview Talk:
Programmable
Surfaces: Toward Massively Parallel Self-Assembly at the Micro- and Nano-scale
(9:50 AM -10:20 AM)
3
Invited Talks:
-
Programmable Self-Assembly from Nanoparticle Based
Devices to Integrated Microsystems (10:20 AM -10:40 AM)
Heiko Jacobs
<hjacobs@ece.umn.edu>, Dept Electrical and Computer Engineering, U of
Minnesota-Twin Cities, Minneapolis, MN
-
Magnetic Self-Assembly
Equilibria at a Macroscopic Scale
(10:40 AM -11:00 AM)
Geoge C. Lisensky <lisensky@beloit.edu>, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
-
Assembly Dynamics Observed in Fluidic Self Assembly (11:00 AM -11:20 AM)
John Stephen
Smith <jsmith@eecs.berkeley.edu>, Dept EECS, University California
Berkeley, Berkeley, CA
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1
(11:20 AM - 11:50 AM April 23)
FNANO
Track on Self-Assembled Surface Chemistry, Session A: Ballroom 1 (11:30 AM-12:30 PM April 23)
Track
Chair: Lloyd Smith
<smith@chem.wisc.edu>, Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, WI
2
Invited Talks:
-
Oriented Immobilization of Single DNA Molecules as a Tool for Surface
Structuring on the Nanometer Scale (11:50 AM-12:10 PM)
Frank
F. Bier <frank.bier@ibmt.fraunhofer.de>, Fraunhofer Institute for
Biomedical Engineering and University of Potsdam, Bergholz-Rehbruecke, Germany
-
Patterning Self-assembled monolayers using a scanning probe: Technique and
Utility (12:10 PM-12:30 PM)
Christopher Gorman
<chris_gorman@ncsu.edu>, Department of Chemistry, North Carolina State
University, Raleigh, NC
Lunch:
Golden Cliff Room (12:30 PM
-1:20 PM April 23)
Self-Assembled
Surface Chemistry Track Chair Overview Talk: Golden Cliff Room:
Surface
Assembly of a Quaternary Nucleic (12:40 PM - 1:10 PM)
Lloyd Smith
<smith@chem.wisc.edu>, Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, WI
FNANO
Track on Self-Assembled Surface Chemistry, Session B: Ballroom 1 (1:20 PM –2:00 PM April 23)
Track
Chair: Lloyd Smith
2
Invited Talks:
-
Creating Nanostructures through Self- and Directed Assembly (1:20 PM
–1:40 PM)
Paul Weiss
<stm@psu.edu>, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA
-
Spontaneous Formation of ~5 Ordered Phase-Separated Domains on the ligand
shell of mixed Monolayer Protected Metal Nanoparticles (1:40 PM –2:00 PM)
Francesco Stellacci
<frstella@mit.edu>, Department of Materials Science and Engineering,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (2:00 PM –2:10 PM April 23)
FNANO
Track on Molecular Electronics Architectures: Ballroom 1 (2:10 PM - 3:40 PM April 23)
Track
coChairs:
Philip J. Kuekes
<kuekes@hpl.hp.com>, Hewlett-Packard Corporation, Palo Alto, CA and
R. Stanley Williams
<stan_williams@hp.com>, Hewlett-Packard Corporation, Palo Alto, CA
Track
Chairs' Overview Talk:
Integrated
Bottom-Up and Top-Down Architecture and Manufacturing (2:10 PM -2:40 PM April 22)
Philip J. Kuekes
and R. Stanley
Williams
3
Invited Talks:
-
System Architectures & System Simulations for Molecular Electronic
Nanomemories and Nanoprocessors (2:40 PM – 3:00 PM)
James
Ellenbogen <ellenbgn@mitre.org> and Carl A.
Picconatto <picconatto@mitre.org> (speaker), MITRE Corporation,
McLean VA
-
Integration for Molecular Electronics (3:00 PM – 3:20 PM)
Paul Franzon <paulf@unity.ncsu.edu>, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC
-
Circuit and System Architecture for DNA-Guided Self-Assembly of Nanoelectronics
(3:20 PM – 3:40 PM)
Alvin Lebeck <alvy@cs.duke.edu>,
Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC
Refreshment
Break: Outside Ballroom 1 (3:40
PM – 3:50 PM April 23)
FNANO
Track on Fullerene Nanostructures:
Ballroom 1 (3:50 PM –6:00 PM April 23)
Track
Chair: Jie Liu
<j.liu@duke.edu>, Department of Chemistry, Duke University, Durham, NC
Track
Chair Overview Talk: Direct
Growth of Long and Aligned Single Walled Carbon Nanotubes for Nanoscale
Electronic Applications (3:50 PM
– 4:20 PM)
5
Invited Talks:
-
Simulations of nanotube-based structures and devices (4:20 PM – 4:40 PM)
Jerry Bernholc
<bernholc@ncsu.edu>, Department of Physics, North Carolina State
University(NCSU), Raleigh, NC
-Fundamental
Properties and Applications of Semiconducting Carbon Nanotubes (4:40 PM –
5:00 PM)
Michael Fuhrer
<mfuhrer@physics.umd.edu>, Department of Physics, University of Maryland,
College Park, MD
-
Growth of SWNT with controlled structure by tailoring catalyst composition and
reaction environment (5:00 PM – 5:20 PM)
Daniel E. Resasco
<resasco@ou.edu>, School of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science,
University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK
-
Designing Carbon-Based Nanotechnology on a Supercomputer (5:20 PM – 5:40
PM)
David Tomanek
<tomanek@pa.msu.edu>, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan State
University, East Lansing, MI
-
Controlled assembly of carbon nanotube structures and devices (5:40 PM –
6:00 PM)
Otto Zhou
<zhou@physics.unc.edu>, Material Science, Department of Physics,
University of North Carolina (UNC), Chapel Hill, NC
Closing
of Conference & Announcement of Plans for Next Year's FNANO Conference: Ballroom 1 (6:00 PM April 23)
John
H. Reif, Conference Chair