Conducting nanowires built by controlled self-assembly of amyloid fibers and selective metal deposition
Howard Hughes Medical Institute · University of Chicago
Abstract
Recent research in the field of nanometer-scale electronics has focused on the operating principles of small-scale devices and schemes to realize useful circuits. In contrast to established "top-down" fabrication techniques, molecular self-assembly is emerging as a "bottom-up" approach for fabricating nanostructured materials. Biological macromolecules, especially proteins, provide many valuable properties, but poor physical stability and poor electrical characteristics have prevented their direct use in electrical circuits. Here we describe the use of self-assembling amyloid protein fibers to construct nanowire elements. Self-assembly of a prion determinant from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the N-terminal and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.50
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Authors
6- TSThomas ScheibelCorresponding
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Chicago
- RPR. Parthasarathy
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Chicago
- GJG J Sawicki
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Chicago
- XLXiao‐Min Lin
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Chicago
- HMHeinrich M. Jaeger
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Chicago
Topics & keywords
- Nanotechnology
- Materials science
- Ohmic contact
- Nanowire
- Colloidal gold
- Molecular electronics
- Nanomaterials
- Nanometre