4.8 Article

DNA Trans location in Nanometer Thick Silicon Nanopores

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages 6555-6564

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b02531

Keywords

nanopore; amorphous silicon; thin membrane; single-molecule sensor; STEM; EELS; DNA

Funding

  1. NIH [R21HG004767, R01HG006879]
  2. Nano/Bio Interface Center through the National Science Foundation [NSEC DMR08-32802]
  3. NSF-IGERT program [DGE-0221664]
  4. Office of Naval Research

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Solid-state nanopores are single-molecule sensors that detect changes in ionic conductance (Delta G) when individual molecules pass through them. Producing high signal-to-noise ratio for the measurement of molecular structure in applications such as DNA sequencing requires low noise and large Delta G. The latter is achieved by reducing the nanopore diameter and membrane thickness. While the minimum diameter is limited by the molecule size, the membrane thickness is constrained by material properties. We use molecular dynamics simulations to determine the theoretical thickness limit of amorphous Si membranes to be similar to 1 nm, and we designed an electron-irradiation-based thinning method to reach that limit and drill nanopores in the thinned regions. Double-stranded DNA translocations through these nanopores (down to 1.4 nm in thickness and 2.5 nm in diameter) provide the intrinsic ionic conductance detection limit in Si-based nanopores. In this regime, where the access resistance is comparable to the nanopore resistance, we observe the appearance of two conductance levels during molecule translocation. Considering the overall performance of Si-based nanopores, our work highlights their potential as a leading material for sequencing applications.

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