Guided self-assembly of silsesquioxane nanocubes: Two lessons from DNA

被引:2
|
作者
Toth-Fejel, Tihamer T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Gen Dynam Adv Informat Syst, Michigan Res & Dev Ctr, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 USA
关键词
assembly; digital integrated circuits; DNA origami; nanotechnology; silsesquioxane; Wang cubes;
D O I
10.1109/JSEN.2008.923275
中图分类号
TM [电工技术]; TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号
0808 ; 0809 ;
摘要
The most promising approach to molecular assembly consists of manipulating and connecting chemically synthesized nanoscale building blocks, of which the geometrically most favorable are nanocubes. Silsesquioxanes are a promising set of such nanocubes-cubic cages of silica (similar to 1 nm) with organic groups on each of the eight corners. Silsesquioxanes could be synthesized into larger, easier-to-manipulate multicage nanocubes (3-10 nm), which have the advantage of presenting additional face-bonding opportunities in a larger, easier-to-manipulate molecule. The highest value products that nanocube assembly will manufacture are fully 3-D electronic circuits with 5 run features. Such integrated circuits would consist of nanocubes with electron-donating or electron-accepting semiconducting moieties in their intracube and intercube links. The synthesized nanocubes must be positioned with high precision and reliability so that they could be connected into NAND gates, billions at a time. Two different approaches are available: 1) Wang cube self-assembly and 2) pixilated DNA origami templating. Wang nanocubes are complex heterogeneous 3-D nanocubes with precisely controlled anisotropy. Their self-assembly would be similar to the sequential solid-phase synthesis process used to make DNA oligomers, and amino and bis-amino acid polypeptides, except that instead of building 1-D linear chain molecules that need additional weak-force self-folding and/or processing to form 3-D nanostructures, Wang nanocubes could form arbitrary 3-D nanostructures directly. Their existence depends on the synthesis of complex enantioselective multicage nanocubes with six independent face-connection chemistries with controlled orientation. In pixilated DNA origami templating, higher order silsesquioxane nanocubes would be attached (via amines, thiols, etc.) to one of hundreds of custom-sequence helper strands. Then, the molecular recognition of subsequences of along single-stranded scaffold connect via Watson-Crick binding to the matching helper strand/nanocube complex, thereby making many arbitrary nanostructures possible.
引用
收藏
页码:1036 / 1040
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] DNA-guided self-assembly in living cells
    Liu, Jinqiao
    Tang, Jianpu
    Tong, Zhaobin
    Teng, Guangshuai
    Yang, Dayong
    ISCIENCE, 2023, 26 (05)
  • [2] Synthesis of FePt nanocubes and their oriented self-assembly
    Chen, Min
    Kim, Jaemin
    Liu, J. P.
    Fan, Hongyou
    Sun, Shouheng
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2006, 128 (22) : 7132 - 7133
  • [3] Self-assembly of magnetite nanocubes into helical superstructures
    Singh, Gurvinder
    Chan, Henry
    Baskin, Artem
    Gelman, Elijah
    Repnin, Nikita
    Kral, Petr
    Klajn, Rafal
    SCIENCE, 2014, 345 (6201) : 1149 - 1153
  • [4] Synthesis of FePt nanocubes and their oriented self-assembly
    Chen, Min
    Kim, Jaemin
    Liu, J.P.
    Fan, Hongyou
    Sun, Shouheng
    Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2006, 128 (22): : 7132 - 7133
  • [5] Directional self-assembly of permanently magnetised nanocubes in quasi two dimensional layers
    Donaldson, Joe G.
    Kantorovich, Sofia S.
    NANOSCALE, 2015, 7 (07) : 3217 - 3228
  • [6] Self-Assembly of Flux-Closure Polygons from Magnetite Nanocubes
    Szyndler, Megan W.
    Corn, Robert M.
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS, 2012, 3 (17): : 2320 - 2325
  • [7] Self-Assembly and Crystallization of Hairy (f-Star) and DNA-Grafted Nanocubes
    Knorowski, Christopher
    Travesset, Alex
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2014, 136 (02) : 653 - 659
  • [8] Synthesis and Self-assembly of Oxide Nanocubes in Organic Solution
    Lin, Xi
    Chu, Dewei
    Younis, Adnan
    Li, Sean
    Dang, Feng
    CURRENT ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 2013, 17 (15) : 1666 - 1679
  • [9] Self-assembly of two-dimensional DNA crystals
    Cheng, S
    Che, YQ
    Wei, SA
    You, XZ
    Xiao, SJ
    CHINESE SCIENCE BULLETIN, 2004, 49 (09): : 879 - 882
  • [10] Self-assembly of two- dimensional DNA crystals
    SONG Cheng
    Chinese Science Bulletin, 2004, (09) : 879 - 882