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Temperature-dependent coherent tunneling across graphene-ferritin biomolecular junctions

Authors :
Nipun Kumar Gupta
Senthil Kumar Karuppannan
Rupali Reddy Pasula
Ayelet Vilan
Jens Martin
Wentao Xu
Esther Maria May
Andrew R. Pike
Hippolyte P. A. G. Astier
Teddy Salim
Sierin Lim
Christian A. Nijhuis
School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Hybrid Materials for Opto-Electronics
MESA+ Institute
Source :
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 14(39), 44665-44675. American Chemical Society
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Understanding the mechanisms of charge transport (CT) across biomolecules in solid-state devices is imperative to realize biomolecular electronic devices in a predictive manner. Although it is well-accepted that biomolecule-electrode interactions play an essential role, it is often overlooked. This paper reveals the prominent role of graphene interfaces with Fe-storing proteins in the net CT across their tunnel junctions. Here, ferritin (AfFtn-AA) is adsorbed on the graphene by noncovalent amine-graphene interactions confirmed with Raman spectroscopy. In contrast to junctions with metal electrodes, graphene has a vanishing density of states toward its intrinsic Fermi level ("Dirac point"), which increases away from the Fermi level. Therefore, the amount of charge carriers is highly sensitive to temperature and electrostatic charging (induced doping), as deduced from a detailed analysis of CT as a function of temperature and iron loading. Remarkably, the temperature dependence can be fully explained within the coherent tunneling regime due to excitation of hot carriers. Graphene is not only demonstrated as an alternative platform to study CT across biomolecular tunnel junctions, but it also opens rich possibilities in employing interface electrostatics in tuning CT behavior. Ministry of Education (MOE) Published version We acknowledge the Ministry of Education (MOE) for supporting this research under award no. MOE2019-T2-1-137.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19448244
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 14(39), 44665-44675. American Chemical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b85b9a183c8b58fa92fb9b6bf36ef59