Covalent Modification of Silicon Nitride Nanopore by Amphoteric Polylysine for Short DNA Detection
Author(s) -
Bohua Yin,
Wanyi Xie,
Liyuan Liang,
Yunsheng Deng,
Shixuan He,
Feng He,
Daming Zhou,
Chaker Tlili,
Deqiang Wang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.7b01245
Subject(s) - nanopore , covalent bond , materials science , surface modification , conductance , electrolyte , silicon nitride , chemical engineering , nanotechnology , chemistry , analytical chemistry (journal) , layer (electronics) , chromatography , organic chemistry , mathematics , electrode , combinatorics , engineering
In this work, we demonstrate a chemical modification approach, by means of covalent-bonding amphoteric poly-l-lysine (PLL) on the interior nanopore surface, which could intensively protect the pore from etching when exposed in the electrolyte under various pH conditions (from pH 4 to 12). Nanopore was generated via simple current dielectric breakdown methodology, covalent modification was performed in three steps, and the functional nanopore was fully characterized in terms of chemical structure, hydrophilicity, and surface morphology. I - V curves were recorded under a broad range of pH stimuli to evaluate the stability of the chemical bonding layer; the plotted curves demonstrated that nanopore with a covalent bonding layer has good pH tolerance and showed apparent reversibility. In addition, we have also measured the conductance of modified nanopore with varied KCl concentration (from 0.1 mM to 1 M) at different pH conditions (pHs 5, 7, 9, and 11). The results suggested that the surface charge density does not fluctuate with variation in salt concentration, which inferred that the SiN x nanopore was fully covered by PLL. Moreover, the PLL functionalized nanopore has realized the detection of single-stranded DNA homopolymer translocation under bias voltage of 500 mV, and the 20 nt homopolymers could be evidently differentiated in terms of the current amplitude and dwell time at pHs 5, 8, and 11.
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