Literature DB >> 23270398

Single-molecule electrochemistry: present status and outlook.

Serge G Lemay1, Shuo Kang, Klaus Mathwig, Pradyumna S Singh.   

Abstract

The development of methods for detecting and manipulating matter at the level of individual macromolecules represents one of the key scientific advancements of recent decades. These techniques allow us to get information that is largely unobtainable otherwise, such as the magnitudes of microscopic forces, mechanistic details of catalytic processes, macromolecular population heterogeneities, and time-resolved, step-by-step observation of complex kinetics. Methods based on optical, mechanical, and ionic-conductance signal transduction are particularly developed. However, there is scope for new approaches that can broaden the range of molecular systems that we can study at this ultimate level of sensitivity and for developing new analytical methods relying on single-molecule detection. Approaches based on purely electrical detection are particularly appealing in the latter context, since they can be easily combined with microelectronics or fluidic devices on a single microchip to create large parallel assays at relatively low cost. A form of electrical signal transduction that has so far remained relatively underdeveloped at the single-molecule level is the direct detection of the charge transferred in electrochemical processes. The reason for this is simple: only a few electrons are transferred per molecule in a typical faradaic reaction, a heterogeneous charge-transfer reaction that occurs at the electrode's surface. Detecting this tiny amount of charge is impossible using conventional electrochemical instrumentation. A workaround is to use redox cycling, in which the charge transferred is amplified by repeatedly reducing and oxidizing analyte molecules as they randomly diffuse between a pair of electrodes. For this process to be sufficiently efficient, the electrodes must be positioned within less than 100 nm of each other, and the analyte must remain between the electrodes long enough for the measurement to take place. Early efforts focused on tip-based nanoelectrodes, descended from scanning electrochemical microscopy, to create suitable geometries. However, it has been challenging to apply these technologies broadly. In this Account, we describe our alternative approach based on electrodes embedded in microfabricated nanochannels, so-called nanogap transducers. Microfabrication techniques grant a high level of reproducibility and control over the geometry of the devices, permitting systematic development and characterization. We have employed these devices to demonstrate single-molecule sensitivity. This method shows good agreement with theoretical analysis based on the Brownian motion of discrete molecules, but only once the finite time resolution of the experimental apparatus is taken into account. These results highlight both the random nature of single-molecule signals and the complications that it can introduce in data interpretation. We conclude this Account with a discussion on how scientists can overcome this limitation in the future to create a new experimental platform that can be generally useful for both fundamental studies and analytical applications.

Year:  2012        PMID: 23270398     DOI: 10.1021/ar300169d

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  10 in total

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Authors:  Carl W Fuller; Pius S Padayatti; Hadi Abderrahim; Lisa Adamiak; Nolan Alagar; Nagaraj Ananthapadmanabhan; Jihye Baek; Sarat Chinni; Chulmin Choi; Kevin J Delaney; Rich Dubielzig; Julie Frkanec; Chris Garcia; Calvin Gardner; Daniel Gebhardt; Tim Geiser; Zachariah Gutierrez; Drew A Hall; Andrew P Hodges; Guangyuan Hou; Sonal Jain; Teresa Jones; Raymond Lobaton; Zsolt Majzik; Allen Marte; Prateek Mohan; Paul Mola; Paul Mudondo; James Mullinix; Thuan Nguyen; Frederick Ollinger; Sarah Orr; Yuxuan Ouyang; Paul Pan; Namseok Park; David Porras; Keshav Prabhu; Cassandra Reese; Travers Ruel; Trevor Sauerbrey; Jaymie R Sawyer; Prem Sinha; Jacky Tu; A G Venkatesh; Sushmitha VijayKumar; Le Zheng; Sungho Jin; James M Tour; George M Church; Paul W Mola; Barry Merriman
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Review 10.  Nanopore Electrochemistry: A Nexus for Molecular Control of Electron Transfer Reactions.

Authors:  Kaiyu Fu; Paul W Bohn
Journal:  ACS Cent Sci       Date:  2018-01-16       Impact factor: 14.553

  10 in total

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