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Michael H. Stewart

Researcher at United States Naval Research Laboratory

Publications -  89
Citations -  6906

Michael H. Stewart is an academic researcher from United States Naval Research Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Quantum dot & Förster resonance energy transfer. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 86 publications receiving 5975 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael H. Stewart include United States Department of the Navy & Los Alamos National Laboratory.

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Functionalizing nanoparticles with biological molecules: developing chemistries that facilitate nanotechnology.

TL;DR: Chemistries that Facilitate Nanotechnology Kim E. Sapsford,† W. Russ Algar, Lorenzo Berti, Kelly Boeneman Gemmill,‡ Brendan J. Casey,† Eunkeu Oh, Michael H. Stewart, and Igor L. Medintz .
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The Role of Ligands in the Chemical Synthesis and Applications of Inorganic Nanoparticles.

TL;DR: This article analyzes the interaction of nanoparticle surface and ligands with different chemical groups, the types of bonding, the final dispersibility of ligand-coated nanoparticles in complex media, their reactivity, and their performance in biomedicine, photodetectors, photovoltaic devices, light-emitting devices, sensors, memory devices, thermoelectric applications, and catalysis.
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Energy Transfer with Semiconductor Quantum Dot Bioconjugates: A Versatile Platform for Biosensing, Energy Harvesting, and Other Developing Applications.

TL;DR: This work discusses how QDs are steadily revolutionizing the development of new biosensors along with a myriad of other photonically active nanomaterial-based bioconjugates, and how this field has grown over a relatively short time span.
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The Controlled Display of Biomolecules on Nanoparticles: A Challenge Suited to Bioorthogonal Chemistry

TL;DR: This review includes a critical discussion on the design considerations for NP-bioconjugates and the unique challenges associated with chemistry at the biological-nanoscale interface-the liabilities of traditional bioconjugation chemistries being particularly prominent therein.
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Pushing the band gap envelope: mid-infrared emitting colloidal PbSe quantum dots.

TL;DR: The synthesis of the first colloidal QDs having photoluminescence (PL) in the mid-infrared is reported, allowing the first systematic correlation of QD size with PL energy for PbSe QDs emitting at wavelengths longer than 2 mum, results which are compared with a literature model.