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nics PI Paul Rothemund, computer scientist, Senior Research Associate (r Expert in creating complex shapes and patterns using DNA self-as Interested in scaling up DNA self-assembly, bridging nano, micro PI Erik Winfree, computer scientist, Associate Professor Expert in creating complex shapes and patterns using DNA self-as Interested in creating large, complex patterns using algorithmic PI Marc Bockrath, applied physicist, Assistant Professor Expert in nanoscale device fabrication, physics and properties o Interested in carbon nanotube (CNT) circuit fabrication and char Hareem Maune, graduate student synthesizing and testing CNT de PI William Goddard, theoretical chemist, Full Professor Expert inatomistic simulation of chemical systems. Interested in simulation of DNA-CNT device and circuit systems. Andres Jaramillo-Botero, Director Caltech Center for Multi-scal Siping Han, graduate student, synthesizing and modelling CNT de metallization o Goal: To use DNA self-assembly to overcome the cha of optical and e-beam lithography in creating nanos
25

Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Dec 30, 2015

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Page 1: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

PI Paul Rothemund, computer scientist, Senior Research Associate (research faculty) Expert in creating complex shapes and patterns using DNA self-assembly. Interested in scaling up DNA self-assembly, bridging nano, micro and macro scales.

PI Erik Winfree, computer scientist, Associate Professor Expert in creating complex shapes and patterns using DNA self-assembly. Interested in creating large, complex patterns using algorithmic self-assembly.

PI Marc Bockrath, applied physicist, Assistant Professor Expert in nanoscale device fabrication, physics and properties of single molecules. Interested in carbon nanotube (CNT) circuit fabrication and characterization.

Hareem Maune, graduate student synthesizing and testing CNT devices

PI William Goddard, theoretical chemist, Full Professor Expert in atomistic simulation of chemical systems. Interested in simulation of DNA-CNT device and circuit systems.

Andres Jaramillo-Botero, Director Caltech Center for Multi-scale ModellingSiping Han, graduate student, synthesizing and modelling CNT devices metallization of DNA nanostructures.

Goal: To use DNA self-assembly to overcome the challengesof optical and e-beam lithography in creating nanoscale circuits.

Page 2: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

100 nanometer shapes with 200 pixel patterns, 6 nanometer resolution,100 billion per drop, 90% yield (Rothemund)uses many distinct DNA strands, relatively expensive for higher complexity

100 nanometers200 nanometers

Arbitrary shapes Arbitrary patterns on top of shapes 100 nm100 nm

Page 3: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

ATGGA GACCA

CTGGT TACCT

42 nucleotides, 14.3 nm

ATGGA GACCA

CTGGT TACCT

ATGGA GACCA

CTGGT TACCT

ATGGA GACCA

CTGGT TACCT

ATGGA GACCA

CTGGT TACCT

6 tile wideDNA ribbon:

Page 4: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.
Page 5: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Si/ SiO2

Pd

+

+

Challenge 1: "Functionalization" electronically or optically active materialsmust be coupled to DNA nanostructures in high yield at specificed locations.

We focus on carbon nanotubes (CNTs) but also work on metallization.

DNA noncovalently wraps CNTsand allows them to disperse inbuffer solution.

An origami is made with 'red' and'blue' DNA hooks, having differentDNA sequences on top and bottom.Two batches of CNTs are madewith complementary red or bluestrands.

Red and blue CNT assembleinto crossbar FET on theorigami.

A device measurement is made

Page 6: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

To make nanostructures more rigid and to avoid aggregationorigami-ribbon hybrids are used.

crossbar

red tube blue tubes

50 nm

MOSFET geometry

ChannelGate

red and blue hooks

Page 7: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Over 30% of tubes are within 10 degrees of the desired orientation

Characterization of DNA self-assembled CNT FET

------ Vg= 0.5V

-- -- Vg= -0.5V-- - -- Vg= 0.5V

VSD [V]

I SD

[nA

]

Vg [V]

I SD [

nA

]

-0.5 0.0 0.5 1.00

100

200

300

400

-0.5 0.0 0.5

0

100

200

VSD = 0.85VISD

VSD

Vg

ab

ISD

Orientation of SWNT

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

0-20 20-40 40-60 60-80 80-100 100-120 120-140 140-160 160-180

22%2%

76%

Red side (-1)Unknown (0)Blue side (1)F

requ

ency

Angle

Page 8: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Challenges for DNA organized nanoelectronics 2

Page 9: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Challenge 3, "Wiring-up" and "Bridging length scales": DNA nanostructureshave a fundamental size mismatch with electronics at a larger spatial scale.

Still hard to build, we would liketo self-assemble connections.

E-beam cannot achieve wiring tocomplex objects at the nanoscale.

Challenge 4, "Scaling-up": 200 pixels for DNA origami is a start, butwe expect to want billions of devices. Similarly, a single FET is nice butwe desire circuits.

E-beam patterningcan only wire-upsimple nanodevices.

single origamimax 200 devices

VLSI chip

Page 10: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.
Page 11: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Rothemund's Aims:

To create DNA structures with features that bridge the nano andmicroscales so that a complete device can be fabricated...

To continue work with IBM, to replicate positioning andorienting work at Caltech, so that CNT devices can be moreeasily characterized and integrated.

To combine multiple origami to create large origami breadboards.

A

B

C

D

A B C D

jigsaw puzzle stacking bonds enable 800 pixels

origami shapespatterned DLC on Si placed shapes CNT organization

Page 12: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Bridging the nano and micro scales

N

P

tiles

metallize strands with nanogoldmineralize strands bearing peptides

cross-shaped origami

100 nm

50 x 2microns

furthertileadditions

Page 13: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Patterning of nanotubes (wires) so that theydiverge and can be wired up at the microscale

+ =

CNT FET

+ =

(or colored tracks may be metallized)

Page 14: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

n

Winfree's Aims:To use combined existing DNA self-assembly techniques(DNA origami, ribbons, algorithmic self-assembly, and periodicDNA crystals) to create squares of programmable size.These squares will have a pattern that is appropriate for amemory with demultiplexers, an architecture perfectly suited foruseful circuits.

To explore the addition of actual nanoelectronic components tothe memory pattern, for example a crossbar lattice ofcarbon nanotubes.

an origami seed encoding the number n is added to a soup of tiles

The 'computed'output is asquare of sizen tiles x n tileswith the origamiembeddedin one corner.

Page 15: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

AND gate

AND gate, lower input negated

NOT gate

000100000

0 1 1 0

Self-assembly can compute:a simple example is counting.

A counter grown from origami

Full N x N squares remain animportant challenge.

Error rates must be reduced. A termination scheme for

counters must be demonstrated.

Counting to a fixed length from an origamienables programmed growth of NxN squares

1 n1

n

10 n0

n

0

1 c1

n

00 c0

c

1Rc

L0

S

Counting tile set.

The pattern left behind isa template for a demultiplexer

Page 16: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 000

000

000

0100

000

001

10

1 0 0 1

Input lines encodebinary values for6 (vertical) and9 (horizontal) whichare demultiplexedto access the redmemory element.

The light graypattern underneathwhich determinesthe circuit would becreated by theself-assembly of this21 x 21 square.

Page 17: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Bockrath's Aims:

To self-assemble and characterize circuits of more than onecarbon-nanotube based device to create elementary logic gates and memory elements.

To use short length-sorted carbon nanotubes to increase the yieldof existing devices. (Many problems arise from very long tubesacting as bridges between multiple origami).

To self-assemble novel devices to explore transport physics in nanostructures.

Page 18: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Rationally Engineered Logic gates and Memory Elements Utilizing Multiple Nanotubes

Vs

Vin

Vout

Vs

Vout

Vs

Vs

Vin1

Vout

Vin2

Inverter

SRAM

NOR

Nanotube assembly Schematic circuit diagram

Page 19: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

B

V

I

Novel Devices Probing Transport Physics in Nanostructures: Phase Coherence in Strongly-Interacting Electron Systems

Nanotubes act as a “which path?” interferometer enabling the study of phase coherent transport in Nanotube-based Luttinger liquids via a transport experiment. The setup is analogous to a double slit experiment in optics. The magnetic field B tunes the phase by the Ahoronov-Bohm effect. Tubes must be closer together than the phase coherence length in the electrodes, which is readily obtainable using DNA based self-assembly.

Tunable separation with desired values ~5-20 nm

DNA origami template for parallel nanotubes

Interferometer device

source drain

Many possibilities exist for making novel devices.

Page 20: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Goddard's Aims:Electron transport in DNA-carbon nanotube hybrids:The effect of an insulating DNA layer between carbon nanotubes,silicon nanowires, and quantum dots is unknown. In some casesDNA may be removed from devices post-assembly, in other casesmay remain. Thus it is important to simulate electron transport incarbon nanotube devices, with and without intervening DNA, startingwith atomistic simulation (Next slide).

Simulations of the placement process:The interactions which bind DNA structures to technologicalsurfaces like silicon or diamond-like carbon are poorly understood.The best choice of experimental conditions, as well as the bestchoice of DNA shapes to bind can be explored by atomistic andmesoscale simulation. Free energies of correct and mismatchedbinding, and possible kinetic traps can be explored.

patterned DLC on Si possible kinetic traps and mismatches

Page 21: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

• Size of molecules << scattering lengths (e.g. mean free path, de Broglie wavelength, etc.) -> quantum descriptions necessary.

• Quantum chemistry of molecule(s) + nanotube -> charge flow & bonding -> geometry & energy spectrum of the entire system.

• Organo-metallic interface mechanics and transport. Need to treat molecule as finite and nanotubes as semi-infinite electrodes.

• Escape currents (through organic insulator layer).• Conformation effects on electronic transport.• Effect of finite bias.

• IV characteristic of self-assembled CNT-based transistor junctions.

HOMO

LUMO FE

V

ICNT

DNA

Organic molecule

CNT

V

DNA-origami CNT-based Transistor Junctions

Theory and Modeling to Describe…

Page 22: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Multiscale Methodology:1st-principles I-V validated by

rotaxane modeling

Density-functional theory (Hohenberg-Kohn-Sham)Density-functional theory (Hohenberg-Kohn-Sham)

Ballistic transport theory (Landauer, Buttiker)Ballistic transport theory (Landauer, Buttiker)

T(E,V)

contact widening

self-energy

Green’s ftn. Formalism (Fisher-Lee)Green’s ftn. Formalism (Fisher-Lee)

transmission

electro-chemical potential

conductance

current

HneV ⇒=− , 11 μμ

I =2eh

T(E,V) f1(E −μ2 )− f2 (E −μ1)[ ]dE −∞

G =dIdV

≈2e2

hT

Gm =(EmSm −Hm −Σ1 −Σ2 )−1

Γ1,2 =i Σ1,2 −Σ1,2+( )

T (E,V ) =Tr Γ1GΓ2G+( )

F =m

d2Rdt2

Molecular Mechanics

Dynamics

Molecular Mechanics

Dynamics

geometry

OSS

SS OO O

OO

O

O

O

N N

N N

OSO

S +

+ +

+

4PF6–

O O O

O

O

S S

O O OS

S

S

SO O O

O

O

SS

N

N

N

N

+

++

+

4 P F6–

5

4

3

2

1

0

0 .1 00 .0 50 .0 0-0 .0 5-0 .1 0

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

6 04 02 00-2 0-4 0-6 0

Mono -disulfide [2]Rotaxane Bis -disulfide [2]Rotaxane

- 3- 2

- 10

1

4 00- 4 0x 1 0

- 3

@ gate volta ge 2.55V

2 0 0

1 0 0

0

- 1 0 0

- 2 0 0

1 0 05 00- 5 0- 1 0 0x1 0

- 3

@ gate volta ge 2.4V

Lower curre nt, asymmetric I-V Hig her current, symmetric I-V

dI/dV vs . junction bias and gate bias

source to drain volta ge (mV)source to drain volta ge (mV)

symmetric dI/dV plo t vs junction bias

OSS

SS OO O

OO

O

O

O

N N

N N

OSO

S +

+ +

+

4PF6–

OSS

SS OO O

OO

O

O

O

N N

N N

OSO

S +

+ +

+

4PF6–4PF6–

O O O

O

O

S S

O O OS

S

S

SO O O

O

O

SS

N

N

N

N

+

++

+

4 P F6–

5

4

3

2

1

0

0 .1 00 .0 50 .0 0-0 .0 5-0 .1 0

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

6 04 02 00-2 0-4 0-6 0

Mono -disulfide [2]Rotaxane Bis -disulfide [2]Rotaxane

- 3- 2

- 10

1

4 00- 4 0x 1 0

- 3

@ gate volta ge 2.55V

2 0 0

1 0 0

0

- 1 0 0

- 2 0 0

1 0 05 00- 5 0- 1 0 0x1 0

- 3

@ gate volta ge 2.4V

Lower curre nt, asymmetric I-V Hig her current, symmetric I-V

dI/dV vs . junction bias and gate bias

source to drain volta ge (mV)source to drain volta ge (mV)

symmetric dI/dV plo t vs junction bias

dI/dVe.g. Rotaxane switch

Γ1 Γ2

1m

2

Page 23: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Further validation: bi-phenyl-dithiol modeling

Au (111)

∫ −= 2

1

))(,(2

)( 21

μ

μdEffVET

h

eVI

T(E)

I(V)molecule

contact

contact

Page 24: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Relevance to the Office of Naval Research

DNA self-assembly uses non-hazardous "green" chemistries,decreasing the Navy's environmental footprint.

Fundamental advances in microelectronics underlie all ofour country's defense systems, from networked warfare toavionic systems. Eventually, self-assembly based methods maybe the only path forward to more powerful nanoelectronic systems.

DNA self-assembly techniques may yield lower costelectronics "grown" from cheap components withoutcapital investment in conventional chip fabs.

Page 25: Caltech collaboration for DNA-organized Nanoelectronics The Caltech DNA- nanoelectronics team.

Budget for 4 years, $2.6 million including:

PI: Paul Rothemund: $200K/yr for Senior Research Associate salary and materials

Co-PI: Mark Bockrath $100K/yr for 1 graduate student and materials

Co-PI: Bill Goddard $100K/yr for 1 graduate student and materials

Co-PI: Erik Winfree $100K/yr for 1 graduate student and materials

Equipment $150K/yr including plasma etcher/cleaner ($20K), wafer-scale Atomic Force Microscope ($200K) temperature-controlled dynamic light scattering ($50K).