Metallization of Silver Through Coffee‐Ring Assisted Ribonucleic Acid Scaffolding Technique

Preferential binding of base pair units with metallic ions within deoxyribonucleic acids (DNA) to form metal-DNA complexes are well studied and understood. Excitingly, such natural processes have been utilized “artificially” for designing and fabricating nanometallic structures and patterns primaril...

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Egile Nagusiak: Shakir, Sehar, Talebi, Sara, Abd‐ur‐Rehman, Hafiz Muhammad, Phang, Siew Moi, Iwamoto, Mitsumasa, Yunus, Kamran, Periasamy, Vengadesh
Formatua: Artikulua
Argitaratua: Wiley 2019
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author Shakir, Sehar
Talebi, Sara
Abd‐ur‐Rehman, Hafiz Muhammad
Phang, Siew Moi
Iwamoto, Mitsumasa
Yunus, Kamran
Periasamy, Vengadesh
author_facet Shakir, Sehar
Talebi, Sara
Abd‐ur‐Rehman, Hafiz Muhammad
Phang, Siew Moi
Iwamoto, Mitsumasa
Yunus, Kamran
Periasamy, Vengadesh
author_sort Shakir, Sehar
collection UM
description Preferential binding of base pair units with metallic ions within deoxyribonucleic acids (DNA) to form metal-DNA complexes are well studied and understood. Excitingly, such natural processes have been utilized “artificially” for designing and fabricating nanometallic structures and patterns primarily using double stranded DNA. However, little or no effort has been given to ribonucleic acid or RNA in this aspect. Therefore, in this work we study the scaffolding effect of RNA on metalizing silver (Ag) ions and further the diffusion of majority of the Ag-RNA complexes towards artificially introduced cut or scribed edges as a result of the coffee-ring effect. Upon removal of the RNA scaffold, metallic nanostructures remain along the line of the cut corresponding to the micrometre scale length of the cut, exercising some amount of control and manipulation of parameter. Other parameters such as the height and diameter may directly be related to the concentration and diffusion of the Ag-RNA complexes, while gap size related to the cut width. We anticipate that further in-depth studies will be required before a comprehensive model could be proposed for highly controllable and flexible nanostructure and nanowire fabrication using nucleic acid scaffolding techniques. © 2019 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
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spelling um.eprints-234782020-01-20T03:26:40Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/23478/ Metallization of Silver Through Coffee‐Ring Assisted Ribonucleic Acid Scaffolding Technique Shakir, Sehar Talebi, Sara Abd‐ur‐Rehman, Hafiz Muhammad Phang, Siew Moi Iwamoto, Mitsumasa Yunus, Kamran Periasamy, Vengadesh Q Science (General) QC Physics QH Natural history QR Microbiology Preferential binding of base pair units with metallic ions within deoxyribonucleic acids (DNA) to form metal-DNA complexes are well studied and understood. Excitingly, such natural processes have been utilized “artificially” for designing and fabricating nanometallic structures and patterns primarily using double stranded DNA. However, little or no effort has been given to ribonucleic acid or RNA in this aspect. Therefore, in this work we study the scaffolding effect of RNA on metalizing silver (Ag) ions and further the diffusion of majority of the Ag-RNA complexes towards artificially introduced cut or scribed edges as a result of the coffee-ring effect. Upon removal of the RNA scaffold, metallic nanostructures remain along the line of the cut corresponding to the micrometre scale length of the cut, exercising some amount of control and manipulation of parameter. Other parameters such as the height and diameter may directly be related to the concentration and diffusion of the Ag-RNA complexes, while gap size related to the cut width. We anticipate that further in-depth studies will be required before a comprehensive model could be proposed for highly controllable and flexible nanostructure and nanowire fabrication using nucleic acid scaffolding techniques. © 2019 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim Wiley 2019 Article PeerReviewed Shakir, Sehar and Talebi, Sara and Abd‐ur‐Rehman, Hafiz Muhammad and Phang, Siew Moi and Iwamoto, Mitsumasa and Yunus, Kamran and Periasamy, Vengadesh (2019) Metallization of Silver Through Coffee‐Ring Assisted Ribonucleic Acid Scaffolding Technique. ChemistrySelect, 4 (35). pp. 10320-10328. ISSN 2365-6549, DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/slct.201902335 <https://doi.org/10.1002/slct.201902335>. https://doi.org/10.1002/slct.201902335 doi:10.1002/slct.201902335
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
QC Physics
QH Natural history
QR Microbiology
Shakir, Sehar
Talebi, Sara
Abd‐ur‐Rehman, Hafiz Muhammad
Phang, Siew Moi
Iwamoto, Mitsumasa
Yunus, Kamran
Periasamy, Vengadesh
Metallization of Silver Through Coffee‐Ring Assisted Ribonucleic Acid Scaffolding Technique
title Metallization of Silver Through Coffee‐Ring Assisted Ribonucleic Acid Scaffolding Technique
title_full Metallization of Silver Through Coffee‐Ring Assisted Ribonucleic Acid Scaffolding Technique
title_fullStr Metallization of Silver Through Coffee‐Ring Assisted Ribonucleic Acid Scaffolding Technique
title_full_unstemmed Metallization of Silver Through Coffee‐Ring Assisted Ribonucleic Acid Scaffolding Technique
title_short Metallization of Silver Through Coffee‐Ring Assisted Ribonucleic Acid Scaffolding Technique
title_sort metallization of silver through coffee ring assisted ribonucleic acid scaffolding technique
topic Q Science (General)
QC Physics
QH Natural history
QR Microbiology
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