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Tailoring the hydrophobicity of graphene for its use as nanopores for DNA translocation
2013
Nature Communications
Graphene nanopores are potential successors to biological and silicon-based nanopores. For sensing applications, it is however crucial to understand and block the strong nonspecific hydrophobic interactions between DNA and graphene. Here we demonstrate a novel scheme to prevent DNA-graphene interactions, based on a tailored self-assembled monolayer. For bare graphene, we encounter a paradox: whereas contaminated graphene nanopores facilitated DNA translocation well, clean crystalline graphene
doi:10.1038/ncomms3619
pmid:24126320
fatcat:eabiwpr67fa5ziynmuyqvdwgsa