Two-dimensional (2D) materials have many applications ranging from heterostructure electronics to nanofluidics and quantum technology. In order to effectively utilize 2D materials towards these ends, they must be transferred and integrated into complex device geometries. In this report, we investigate two conventional methods for the transfer of 2D materials: viscoelastic stamping with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and a heated transfer with poly bis-A carbonate (PC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRapid sensing of molecules is increasingly important in many studies and applications, such as DNA sequencing and protein identification. Here, beyond atomically thin 2D nanopores, we conceptualize, simulate and experimentally demonstrate coupled, guiding and reusable bilayer nanopore platforms, enabling advanced ultrafast detection of unmodified molecules. The bottom layer can collimate and decelerate the molecule before it enters the sensing zone, and the top 2D pore (~2 nm) enables position sensing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study investigates transfer ribonucleic acid (tRNA) conformational dynamics in the context of MELAS (mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes) using solid-state silicon nitride (SiN) nanopore technology. SiN nanopores in thin membranes with specific dimensions exhibit high signal resolution, enabling real-time and single-molecule electronic detection of tRNA conformational changes. We focus on human mitochondrial tRNALeu(UAA) (mt-Leu(UAA)) that decodes Leu codons UUA/UUG (UUR) during protein synthesis on the mt-ribosome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiscrete amplitude levels in ordered, time-domain data often represent different underlying latent states of the system that is being interrogated. Analysis and feature extraction from these data sets generally require considering the order of each individual point; this approach cannot take advantage of contemporary general-purpose graphics processing units (gpGPU) and single-instruction multiple-data (SIMD) instruction set architectures. Two sources of such data from single-molecule biological measurements are nanopores and single-molecule field effect transistor (smFET) nanotube devices; both generate streams of time-ordered current or voltage data, typically sampled near 1 MS/s, with run times of minutes, yielding terabyte-scale datasets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecently discovered two-dimensional ferromagnetic materials (2DFMs) have rapidly gained much interest in the fields of spintronics and computing, where they may prove powerful tools for miniaturizing devices such as magnetic tunnel junctions and spin-transfer torque memory bits. In addition, heterojunctions and twisted bilayer stacks of such materials may yield exotic spin textures. However, preparation of such devices is complicated by the air sensitivity of many 2DFMs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrathin nanopore sensors allow single-molecule and polymer measurements at sub-microsecond time resolution enabled by high current signals (∼10-30 nA). We demonstrate for the first time the experimental probing of the ultrafast translocation and folded dynamics of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) through a nanopore at 10 MHz bandwidth with acquisition of data points per 25 ns (150 MB/s). By introducing a rigorous algorithm, we are able to accurately identify each current level present within translocation events and elucidate the dynamic folded and unfolded behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate DNA translocations through silicon nitride pores formed by simple chemical etching on glass substrates using microscopic amounts of hydrofluoric acid. DNA translocations and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) prove the fabrication of nanopores and allow their characterization. From ionic measurements on 318 chips, we report the effective pore diameters ranging from zero (pristine membranes) and sub-nm to over 100 nm, within 50 μm diameter membranes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLife detection on Mars is an important topic that includes a direct search for biomarkers. This requires instruments for biomarker detection that are compact, lightweight, and able to withstand operations in space. Solid-state nanopores are excellent candidates that allow fast single-molecule detection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInverting a semiconducting channel is the basis of all field-effect transistors. In silicon-based metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs), a gate dielectric mediates this inversion. Access to inversion layers may be granted by interfacing ultrathin low-dimensional semiconductors in heterojunctions to advance device downscaling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnabled by proteins, we present an all-electrical method for rapid detection of small pharmaceuticals (ibuprofen and sulfamethoxazole [SMZ]) in aqueous media using silicon nitride pores. Specifically, we use carrier proteins, bovine serum albumin (BSA), and take advantage of their interactions with two small drug molecules to form BSA-drug complexes which can be detected by nm-diameter pores, thereby confirming the presence of small pharmaceuticals. We demonstrate detection of ibuprofen and SMZ at concentrations down to 100 nM (∼21 μg/L) and 48.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe fabricate on-chip solid-state nanofluidic-2D nanopore systems that can limit the range of motion for DNA in the sensing region of a nanopore. We do so by creating devices containing one or more silicon nitride pores and silicon nitride pillars supporting a 2D pore that orient DNA within a nanopore device to a restricted geometry, yet allow the free motion of ions to maintain a high signal-to-noise ratio. We discuss two concepts with two and three independent electrical connections and corresponding nanopore chip device architectures to achieve this goal in practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe large-scale growth of semiconducting thin films on insulating substrates enables batch fabrication of atomically thin electronic and optoelectronic devices and circuits without film transfer. Here an efficient method to achieve rapid growth of large-area monolayer MoSe films based on spin coating of Mo precursor and assisted by NaCl is reported. Uniform monolayer MoSe films up to a few inches in size are obtained within a short growth time of 5 min.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransmission electron microscopy (TEM) has led to important discoveries in atomic imaging and as an atom-by-atom fabrication tool. Using electron beams, atomic structures can be patterned, annealed and crystallized, and nanopores can be drilled in thin membranes. We review current progress in TEM analysis and implement a computer vision nanopore-detection algorithm that achieves a 96% pixelwise precision in TEM images of nanopores in 2D membranes (WS), and discuss parameter optimization including a variation on the traditional grid search and gradient ascent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report ionic current and double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) translocation measurements through solid-state membranes with two TEM-drilled ∼3-nm diameter silicon nitride nanopores in parallel. Nanopores are fabricated with similar diameters but varying in effective thicknesses (from 2.6 to 10 nm) ranging from a thickness ratio of 1:1 to 1:3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGas flows are often analyzed with the theoretical descriptions formulated over a century ago and constantly challenged by the emerging architectures of narrow channels, slits, and apertures. Here, we report atomic-scale defects in two-dimensional (2D) materials as apertures for gas flows at the ultimate quasi-0D atomic limit. We establish that pristine monolayer tungsten disulfide (WS) membranes act as atomically thin barriers to gas transport.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on single atomic zero-dimensional (0D) pores fabricated using aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (AC-STEM) in monolayer MoS. Pores are comprised of a few atoms missing in the two-dimensional (2D) lattice (1-5 Mo atoms) of characteristic sizes from ∼0.5 to 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding the atomistic origin of defects in two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides, their impact on the electronic properties, and how to control them is critical for future electronics and optoelectronics. Here, we demonstrate the integration of thermochemical scanning probe lithography (tc-SPL) with a flow-through reactive gas cell to achieve nanoscale control of defects in monolayer MoS. The tc-SPL produced defects can present either p- or n-type doping on demand, depending on the used gasses, allowing the realization of field effect transistors, and p-n junctions with precise sub-μm spatial control, and a rectification ratio of over 10.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe use the beam of a transmission electron microscope (TEM) to modulate the current-voltage characteristics of a two-terminal monolayer molybdenum disulfide (MoS) channel fabricated on a silicon nitride substrate. Suppression of the two-dimensional (2D) MoS channel conductance up to 94% is observed when the beam hits and charges the substrate surface. Gate-tunable transistor characteristics dependent on beam current are observed even when the beam is up to tens of microns away from the channel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanopores are promising for many applications including DNA sequencing and molecular filtration. Solid-state nanopores are preferable over their biological counterparts for applications requiring durability and operation under a wider range of external parameters, yet few studies have focused on optimizing their robustness. We report the lifetime and durability of pores and porous arrays in 10 to 100 nm-thick, low-stress silicon nitride (SiN) membranes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanopore sensing is a powerful tool for the detection of biomolecules. Solid-state nanopores act as single-molecule sensors that can function in harsh conditions. Their resilient nature makes them attractive candidates for taking this technology into the field to measure environmental samples for life detection in space and water quality monitoring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFResearch on 2D materials is one of the core themes of modern condensed matter physics. Prompted by the experimental isolation of graphene, much attention has been given to the unique optical, electronic, and structural properties of these materials. In the past few years, semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have attracted increasing interest due to properties such as direct band gaps and intrinsically broken inversion symmetry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe provide an overview of atom-scale apertures in solid-state membranes, from "pores" and "tubes" to "channels", with characteristic sizes comparable to the sizes of ions and water molecules. In this regime of ∼1 nm diameter pores, water molecules and ions are strongly geometrically confined: the size of water molecules (∼0.3 nm) and the size of "hydrated" ions in water (∼0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe properties of van der Waals (vdW) materials often vary dramatically with the atomic stacking order between layers, but this order can be difficult to control. Trilayer graphene (TLG) stacks in either a semimetallic ABA or a semiconducting ABC configuration with a gate-tunable band gap, but the latter has only been produced by exfoliation. Here we present a chemical vapor deposition approach to TLG growth that yields greatly enhanced fraction and size of ABC domains.
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