Presentation
22 February 2021 Nanoscale 2D and 3D patterning using programmed DNA assemblies
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
DNA offers a high degree of programmability that enables the synthesis of highly structured 2D and 3D materials on the 10-100 nanometer scale using the technical approach called DNA origami. These materials can also be scaled to fabricate micron- and millimeter-scale hierarchical materials that preserve their nanometer-scale structural features. Either form of DNA-based material can be converted to inorganic materials including silica, or used to spatially organize secondary molecules including chromophores, quantum dots, peptides, and proteins for a diverse array of applications in patterning, photonics, excitonics, and medicine. In the first part of my talk I will present work in our group to enable the facile design and scaleable synthesis of structured 2D and 3D materials using DNA origami. In the second part of my talk I will present applications of these structured nanoscale materials to program multiplexed optical barcodes, quantum logic gates, and vaccines using quantum dots, chromophores, and proteins, respectively, organized spatially on the nanometer-scale.
Conference Presentation
© (2021) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mark Bathe "Nanoscale 2D and 3D patterning using programmed DNA assemblies", Proc. SPIE 11610, Novel Patterning Technologies 2021, 1161012 (22 February 2021); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2584969
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KEYWORDS
Optical lithography

Quantum dots

Chromophores

Proteins

Molecular photonics

Molecules

Multiplexing

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