Reza Mohammadzadegan, Hassan Mohabatkar, Mohammad Hossein Sheikhi, Afsaneh
Safavia and Mahmood Barati Khajouee
Abstract
We have developed simple methods of reproducibly creating deoxyribonucleic acid
(DNA)-templated gold nanowires on silicon. First DNA nanowires were aligned on
silicon surfaces. Briefly, modified silicon wafer was soaked in the DNA
solution, and then the solution was removed using micropipettes; the surface
tension at the moving air-solution interface is sufficient to align the DNA
nanowires on the silicon wafer. In another attempt, an aqueous dispersion of
sodium azide-stabilized gold nanoparticles was prepared. The nanoparticles
aligned double-stranded λ-DNA to form a linear nanoparticle array. Continuous
gold nanowires were obtained. The above nanowires were structurally
characterized using scanning electron microscopy. The results of the
characterizations show the wires to be 57-323 nm wide, to be continuous with a
length of 2.8-9.5 μm. The use of DNA as a template for the self-assembly of
conducting nanowires represents a potentially important approach in the
fabrication of nanoscale interconnects.
Keywords: DNA-templated
nanowire; Gold nanoparticles; Nanowires