Ionic transport through a graphene biomimetic subnanometer (sub-nm) pore of arbitrary shape and realistically decorated by intrinsic negatively charged sites is investigated by all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. In the presence of external electric fields, cation trapping-assisted translocation occurs in the vicinity of the 2D subnanometer pore, while the anion current is blocked by the negative charges. The adsorbed cations in such asymmetrically charged nanopores are located on the top of the nanopore instead of blocking the pore, as suggested previously in highly symmetric pores such as crown ethers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGating in ion transport is at the center of many vital living-substance transmission processes, and understanding how gating works at an atomic level is essential but intricate. However, our understanding and finite experimental findings of subcontinuum ion transport in subnanometer nanopores are still limited, which is out of reach of the classical continuum nanofluidics. Moreover, the influence of ion density on subcontinuum ion transport is poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOn-chip manipulation of charged particles using electrophoresis or electroosmosis is widely used for many applications, including optofluidic sensing, bioanalysis and macromolecular data storage. We hereby demonstrate a technique for the capture, localization, and release of charged particles and DNA molecules in an aqueous solution using tubular structures enabled by a strain-induced self-rolled-up nanomembrane (S-RuM) platform. Cuffed-in 3D electrodes that are embedded in cylindrical S-RuM structures and biased by a constant DC voltage are used to provide a uniform electrical field inside the microtubular devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA systematic microscopic analysis of the various resistive effects involved in the electronic detection of single biomolecules in a nanopore of a MoS nanoribbon is presented. The variations of the transverse electronic current along the two-dimensional (2D) membrane due to the translocation of DNA and protein molecules through the pore are obtained by model calculations based on molecular dynamics (MD) and Boltzmann transport formalism, which achieved good agreement with the experimental data. Our analysis points to a self-consistent interaction among ions, charge carriers around the pore rim, and biomolecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSynthetic DNA-based data storage systems have received significant attention due to the promise of ultrahigh storage density and long-term stability. However, all known platforms suffer from high cost, read-write latency and error-rates that render them noncompetitive with modern storage devices. One means to avoid the above problems is using readily available native DNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe use the electronic properties of 2D solid-state nanopore materials to propose a versatile and generally applicable biosensor technology by using a combination of molecular dynamics, nanoscale device simulations, and statistical signal processing algorithms. As a case study, we explore the classification of three epigenetic biomarkers, the methyl-CpG binding domain 1 (MBD-1), MeCP2, and γ-cyclodextrin, attached to double-stranded DNA to identify regions of hyper- or hypomethylations by utilizing a matched filter. We assess the sensing ability of the nanopore device to identify the biomarkers based on their characteristic electronic current signatures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a scalable device design of a dense array of multiple nanopores made from nanoscale semiconductor materials to detect and identify translocations of many biomolecules in a massively parallel detection scheme. We use molecular dynamics coupled to nanoscale device simulations to illustrate the ability of this device setup to uniquely identify DNA parallel translocations. We show that the transverse sheet currents along membranes are immune to the crosstalk effects arising from simultaneous translocations of biomolecules through multiple pores, due to their ability to sense only the local potential changes.
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