Growth and Assembly of Chip-Integrated Superlattice for Nanostructured Electronic Devices via DNA-Programmable Assembly
ORAL
Abstract
Self-assembly methods using DNA nanotechnology have demonstrated powerful and unique capabilities to encode nanomaterial structures through the prescribed placement of inorganic and biological nanocomponents.The challenge of selectively growing superlattices on specific locations of surfaces and their integration with conventional nanofabrication has hindered the fabrication of 3D DNA-assembled functional devices. Here we present a scalable nanofabrication technique that combines bottom-up and top-down approaches for selective growth of 3D DNA superlattices on gold micro-arrays. We further demonstrate that this approach allows for the full fabrication of self-assembled 3D nanostructured electronic devices. DNA strands are bound onto the gold arrays, which anchor the DNA origami frames and promote ordered framework growth on the specific areas of the surface, enabling precise control of the lateral placement and orientation of superlattices. DNA frameworks selectively grown on the pads are subsequently templated to nanoscale silica and tin oxide (SnOx) that follow the framework architecture, as confirmed by structural and chemical characterizations. The fabricated SnOx superlattices are integrated on a chip into devices that demonstrate photocurrent response.
*The work at the University of Minnesota and at Columbia University was supported in part by the W. M. Keck Foundation. The work involving DNA frame assembly was supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Grant DE-SC0008772.
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Publication: Submitted Manuscript: Scalable Fabrication of Chip-Integrated 3D Nanostructured Electronic Devices
via DNA-Programmable Assembly
Presenters
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Aaron N Michelson
- Center for Functional Nanomaterial, Brookhaven National Lab
- Brookhaven National Lab
- Brookhaven National Laboratory