1 / 6

Fabrication and Characterization of Nanopore-Array Electrodes

Fabrication and Characterization of Nanopore-Array Electrodes. Track-etched membranes. Diblock copolymer. 200 nm. “Chemistry” within nanometer-scale pores (nanopores) Chemical sensing using nanopores. 1. Takashi Ito. Department of Chemistry, Kansas State University.

gaia
Download Presentation

Fabrication and Characterization of Nanopore-Array Electrodes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fabrication and Characterization of Nanopore-Array Electrodes Track-etched membranes Diblock copolymer 200 nm “Chemistry” within nanometer-scale pores (nanopores) Chemical sensing using nanopores 1 Takashi Ito Department of Chemistry, Kansas State University Softmatter miniconference, KSU-Physics, May 16, 2007

  2. Nanopore-Array Electrodes (NAEs) 2 1. An array of parallel cylindrical nanopores • Good model to study the mass transport behaviors (fluid dynamic simulations) • Well-defined control of molecular interactions by surface modification • Relatively easy preparation • Larger electrochemical signals; no difficulty to find nanopores for fluorescence microscopy 2. Insulator-based nanopores • Control the electric field in the pores and thus molecular flow (electrokinetic effects) 3. Nanopores immobilized on an electrode • Support a nanoporous membrane: wider thickness range • Preconcentrate analytes (via electrokinetic effects and via binding sites immobilized on it) • Detect the molecules within the nanopores 4. Methods to measure mass transport • Electrochemistry: quick, quantitative, suitable for the future sensor applications • Fluorescence: directly “see” molecular behaviors, information on molecular structure

  3. Issues to be Studied in this Project 3 1. Clarify “chemistry” within polymer-based cylindrical nanometer-scale pores • “Chemistry” covalent reactions on nanopore surface, chemical interactions (mass transport, entrapment) • Mass transport behaviors of molecules and biomolecules in the nanopores chemical interactions, steric effects, electrokinetic effects 2. Develop new analytical methods for biomolecules (proteins, oligonucleotides and viruses) using the nanopores • Chemical sensors, biosensors • Chemical separation

  4. Previous Achievements and Ongoing Topics 200 nm 4 1. Toestablish simple and reproducible ways to prepare nanopore-array electrodes Diblock copolymer Track-etched membranes 2. To establish ways to characterize the nanopore-array electrodes & nannoporous structure • electrochemistry(in addition to AFM, EM, ellipsometry, IR,…) Ito, T.; Audi, A. A.; Dible, G. P. Anal. Chem.2006, 78, 7048-7053. 3. To control chemical interactions within nanopores • identify chemical functional groups (nanopores from a diblock copolymer) • control: chemical modification (covalent; polymer adsorption) in particular, reduction of nonspecific adsorption (PEG?) 4. To measure molecular mass transport and entrapment in nanopores • electrochemistry • fluorescence (single molecule spectroscopy, with Dr. Higgins) 5. To demonstrate chemical sensing using nanopore-array electrodes

  5. Other Projects in Ito‘s Group 2. Surface Chemistry of GaN (Collaboration with Dr. Edgar (Chem. Eng.)) 1. Multiphoton Photolithography (Collaboration with Dr. Higgins (Chem.)) Higgins, D. A.; Everett, T. A.; Xie, A.; Forman, S. M.; Ito, T. Appl. Phys. Lett.2006, 88, 184101. Xie, A.; Ito, T.; Higgins, D. A. Adv. Funct. Mater.2007, in press. 20 µm 475 nm 0 nm 5 Interdisciplinary research involving analytical chemistry and nanotechnologies My Previous Works (except electrochemistry-related works) 1. Carbon Nanotube-Based Coulter Nanoparticle Counters 2. Molecular STM Tips for Single Molecule Discrimination 3. Chemical Force Microscopy Ito, T.; Namba, M.; Bühlmann, P.; Umezawa, Y. Langmuir1997, 13, 4323. Ito, T.; Citterio, D.; Bühlmann, P.; Umezawa, Y. Langmuir1999, 15, 2788. Ito, T.; Sun, L.; Henriquez, R. R.; Crooks, R. M. Acc. Chem. Res. 2004, 37, 937. Nishino, T.; Ito, T.; Umezawa, Y. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA2005, 102, 5659.

  6. Instruments & Techniques in Ito’s Group • electrochemistry (potentiostat, AC impedance, potentiometer) • AFM/STM (electrochemistry, in solution, in air, in Ar) • organic thin film characterization (spectroscopic ellipsometer, contact angle goniometer, FTIR-RAS/ATR) • fluorescence microscopy (fluorescence microscope) • simple organic synthesis (organic mercaptans) 6 For my near-future projects… • Relatively large biomolecules (or their assemblies; except DNA; > 5 nm in diameter). - Their dynamic properties (structural change, deformation, denature) is medically or biologically important. - They are available commercially or through collaboration. - They can be fluorescently labeled (e.g., for FRET experiments).

More Related