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DNA
Technique Yields 3-D Crystalline Organization of Nanoparticles
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
First step
toward three-dimensional catalytic, magnetic, and/or optical
nanomaterials
"Body-centered-cubic"
unit cells of the 3-D nanoparticle crystals. One type of
nanoparticle occupies each corner of the cube and a second
type of nanoparticle is located centrally inside. These unit
cells, measuring tens of nanometers, form a repeating
lattice that extends more than a micron (1,000 nanometers)
in three dimensions.
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Credit:
Brookhaven National Laboratory
In an achievement some see
as the "holy grail" of nanoscience, researchers at the
U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory have
for the first time used DNA to guide the creation of
three-dimensional, ordered, crystalline structures of
nanoparticles (particles with dimensions measured in billionths
of a meter). The ability to engineer such 3-D structures is
essential to producing functional materials that take advantage
of the unique properties that may exist at the nanoscale - for
example, enhanced magnetism, improved catalytic activity, or new
optical properties. The research will be published in the January
31, 2008, issue of the journal Nature.
"From previous research,
we know that highly selective DNA binding can be used to program
nanoparticle interactions," said Oleg Gang, a scientist at
Brookhaven's Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN), who led
the interdisciplinary research team, which includes Dmytro
Nykypanchuk and Mathew Maye of the CFN, and Daniel van der Lelie
of the Biology Department. "But while theory has
intriguingly predicted that DNA can guide nanoparticles to form
ordered, 3-D phases, no one has accomplished this experimentally,
until now."
As with the group's previous
work, the new assembly method relies on the attractive forces
between complementary strands of DNA - the molecule made of
pairing bases known by the letters A, T, G, and C that carries
the genetic code of living things. First, the scientists attach
to nanoparticles hair-like extensions of DNA with specific
"recognition sequences" of complementary bases. Then
they mix the DNA-covered particles in solution. When the
recognition sequences find one another in solution, they bind
together to link the nanoparticles.
This first binding is
necessary, but not sufficient, to produce the organized
structures the scientists are seeking. To achieve ordered
crystals, the scientists alter the properties of DNA and borrow
some techniques known for traditional crystals.
Importantly, they heat the
samples of DNA-linked particles and then cool them back to room
temperature. "This 'thermal processing' is somewhat similar
to annealing used in forming more common crystals made from
atoms," explained Nykypanchuk. "It allows the
nanoparticles to unbind, reshuffle, and find more stable binding
arrangements."
Researchers
Matthew Maye, Niels van der Lelie, Oleg Gang, and Dmytro
Nykypanchuk.
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Credit:
Brookhaven
National Laboratory
The team also experimented
with different degrees of DNA flexibility, recognition sequences,
and DNA designs in order to find a "sweet spot" of
interactions where a stable, crystalline form would appear.
Results from a variety of
analysis techniques, including small angle x-ray scattering at
the National Synchrotron Light Source and dynamic light
scattering and different types of optical spectroscopies and
electron microscopy at the CFN, were combined to reveal the
detail of the ordered structures and the underlying processes for
their formation. These results indicate that the scientists have
indeed found that sweet spot to create 3-D nanoparticle
assemblies with long-range crystalline order using DNA. The
crystals are remarkably open, with the nanoparticles themselves
occupying only 5 percent of the crystal lattice volume, and DNA
occupying another 5 percent. "This open structure leaves a
lot of room for future modifications, including the incorporation
of different nano-objects or biomolecules, which will lead to
enhanced nanoscale properties and new classes of applications,"
said Maye. For example, pairing gold nanoparticles with other
metals often improves catalytic activity. Additionally, the DNA
linking molecules can be used as a kind of chemical scaffold for
adding small molecules, polymers, or proteins.
Furthermore, once the crystal
structure is set, it remains stable through repeated heating and
cooling cycles, a feature important to many potential
applications.
The crystals are also
extraordinarily sensitive to thermal expansion - 100 times more
sensitive than ordinary materials, probably due to the heat
sensitivity of DNA. This significant thermal expansion could be a
plus in controlling optical and magnetic properties, for example,
which are strongly affected by changes in the distance between
particles. The ability to effect large changes in these
properties underlies many potential applications such as energy
conversion and storage, as well as sensor technology.
The Brookhaven team worked with
gold nanoparticles as a model, but they say the method can be
applied to other nanoparticles as well. And they fully expect the
technique could yield a wide array of crystalline phases with
different types of 3-D lattices that could be tailored to
particular functions.
"This work is the first
step to demonstrate that it is possible to obtain ordered
structures. But it opens so many avenues for researchers, and
this is why it is so exciting," Gang says.
Source:
Brookhaven National Laboratory

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