Publication | Open Access
A DNA-based approach to the carbon nanotube sorting problem
146
Citations
42
References
2008
Year
NanomedicineCarbon Nanotube SortingDna NanotechnologyEngineeringNanomaterialsNatural SciencesOrdered Supramolecular StructureOligonucleotideMolecular BiologyDna ReplicationMolecular SortingSpecific ChiralityChemistryDna ComputingAdvanced SeparationCarbon NanotubesBiophysics
Carbon nanotube sorting, i.e., the separation of a mixture of tubes into different electronic types and further into species with a specific chirality, is a fascinating problem of both scientific and technological importance. It is one of those problems that are easy to describe but difficult to solve. Single-stranded DNA forms stable complexes with carbon nanotubes and disperses them effectively in water. A particular DNA sequence of alternating guanine (G) and thymine (T) nucleotides ((GT) n , with n = 10 to 45) self-assembles into an ordered supramolecular structure around an individual nanotube, in such a way that the electrostatic properties of the DNA-carbon nanotube hybrid depend on tube structure, enabling nanotube separation by anion-exchange chromatography. This review provides a summary of the separation of metallic and semiconducting tubes, and purification of single (n, m) tubes using the DNA-wrapping approach. We will present our current understanding of the DNA-carbon nanotube hybrid structure and separation mechanisms, and predict future developments of the DNA-based approach.
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