| Literature DB >> 29877867 |
Md Mir Hossen1, Lee Bendickson, Pierre E Palo, Zhiqi Yao, Marit Nilsen-Hamilton, Andrew C Hillier.
Abstract
DNA origami can be used to create a variety of complex and geometrically unique nanostructures that can be further modified to produce building blocks for applications such as in optical metamaterials. We describe a method for creating metal-coated nanostructures using DNA origami templates and a photochemical metallization technique. Triangular DNA origami forms were fabricated and coated with a thin metal layer by photochemical silver reduction while in solution or supported on a surface. The DNA origami template serves as a localized photosensitizer to facilitate reduction of silver ions directly from solution onto the DNA surface. The metallizing process is shown to result in a conformal metal coating, which grows in height to a self-limiting value with increasing photoreduction steps. Although this coating process results in a slight decrease in the triangle dimensions, the overall template shape is retained. Notably, this coating method exhibits characteristics of self-limiting and defect-filling growth, which results in a metal nanostructure that maps the shape of the original DNA template with a continuous and uniform metal layer and stops growing once all available DNA sites are exhausted.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29877867 DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/aacb16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotechnology ISSN: 0957-4484 Impact factor: 3.874