Title :
AC electrical characterisation and insight to charge transfer mechanisms in DNA molecular wires through temperature and UV effects
Author :
Kassegne, Sam ; Wibowo, Denni ; Chi, James ; Ramesh, Varsha ; Narenji, Alaleh ; Khosla, Ajit ; Mokili, John
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., San Diego State Univ., San Diego, CA, USA
Abstract :
In this study, AC characterisation of DNA molecular wires, effects of frequency, temperature and UV irradiation on their conductivity is presented. λ-DNA molecular wires suspended between high aspect-ratio electrodes exhibit highly frequency-dependent conductivity that approaches metal-like behaviour at high frequencies (~MHz). Detailed temperature dependence experiments were performed that traced the impedance response of λ-DNA until its denaturation. UV irradiation experiments where conductivity was lost at higher and longer UV exposures helped to establish that it is indeed λ-DNA molecular wires that generate conductivity. The subsequent renaturation of λ-DNA resulted in the recovery of current conduction, providing yet another proof of the conducting DNA molecular wire bridge. The temperature results also revealed hysteretic and bi-modal impedance responses that could make DNA a candidate for nanoelectronics components like thermal transistors and switches. Further, these experiments shed light on the charge transfer mechanism in DNA. At higher temperatures, the expected increase in thermal-induced charge hopping may account for the decrease in impedance supporting the `charge hopping mechanism´ theory. UV light, on the other hand, causes damage to GC base-pairs and phosphate groups reducing the path available both for hopping and short-range tunneling mechanisms, and hence increasing impedance - this again supporting both the `charge hopping´ and `tunneling´ mechanism theories.
Keywords :
DNA; bioelectric potentials; biothermics; charge exchange; electric impedance; electrodes; hopping conduction; molecular biophysics; short-range order; tunnelling; λ-DNA; AC electrical characterisation; GC base pairs; UV effects; UV irradiation; bimodal impedance response; charge transfer mechanisms; conducting DNA molecular wire bridge; current conduction; dry-state attachment; frequency effects; high aspect-ratio electrodes; highly frequency-dependent conductivity; metal-like behaviour; nanoelectronics components; phosphate groups; short-range tunnelling mechanisms; switches; temperature effects; thermal induced charge hopping mechanism; thermal transistors; traced impedance response;
Journal_Title :
Nanobiotechnology, IET
DOI :
10.1049/iet-nbt.2014.0044