2006 Summer Undergraduate Research Intern Program Conference
DNA Nanowires
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Supporting Documents
- Presentation (with audio) (SWF)
- Presentation Slides (PDF, 2.47 Mb)
| Contributor(s) | Margarita Shalaev Purdue University, West Lafayette |
|---|---|
| Abstract | DNA is a relatively inexpensive and ubiquitous material that can be used as a scaffold for constructing nanowires. Our research focuses on the manufacturing of DNA-templated, magnetic nanowires. This is accomplished by synthesizing positively-charged metal nanoparticles that self-assemble along the contours of λ-phage DNA. This self-assembly is achieved through electrostatic interactions between positively-charged metal particles and negatively-charged DNA strands. Three types of magnetic particles were prepared: iron oxide (Fe¬2O3), cobalt iron oxide (CoFe2O3), and manganese iron oxide (MnFe2O¬¬¬3). These particles were then characterized with ultraviolet-visible spectrophotometry (UV-VIS) and Fourier-Transform Infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR). Moreover, DNA coated with Fe2O3 was analyzed by means of UV-VIS. It was determined through IR that the manufactured particles had a positive charge, which is absolutely necessary if they are to be used to coat negatively-charged DNA strands. Additionally, UV-VIS analyses gave insight into how the particles coat the DNA; when too many magnetic particles were allowed to interact with the DNA, the quality and evenness of coating actually decreased. Future studies will include the fabrication of DNA coated with each type of particle, as well as characterization of the nanowires. Advisor: Albena Ivanisevic, Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN |
| Cite this work | If you reference this work in a publication, please cite as follows: |
| Date posted | 14 Aug, 2006 |
| Time | 11:45 AM, August 04, 2006 |
| Location | EE Building, Room 118 |
| Type | Online Presentations |
| Tags |
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Posted on 12 November, 2006 by Raja Reddy P
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Posted on 30 September, 2006 by Kam Ned
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Posted on 17 September, 2006 by Carlos Alberto Martinez Perez
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Posted on 16 August, 2006 by Feroze
Wonderful presentation. Author finds a unique way of presenting research very effectively.
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Part of: 2006 Summer Undergraduate Research Intern Program Conference
2006 Summer Undergraduate Research Intern Program Conference
The NASA Institute for Nanoelectronics and Computing and NSF Network for Computating Nanotechnology offers qualifying students the opportunity to become Summer Undergraduate Research Interns (SURIs). SURIs join an ongoing cross-disciplinary research project team comprised of faculty and graduate …
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