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. 2010 Apr 23;6(8):945-51.
doi: 10.1002/smll.200902050.

Bionanosphere lithography via hierarchical peptide self-assembly of aromatic triphenylalanine

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Bionanosphere lithography via hierarchical peptide self-assembly of aromatic triphenylalanine

Tae Hee Han et al. Small. .

Abstract

A nanolithographic approach based on hierarchical peptide self-assembly is presented. An aromatic peptide of N-(t-Boc)-terminated triphenylalanine is designed from a structural motif for the beta-amyloid associated with Alzheimer's disease. This peptide adopts a turnlike conformation with three phenyl rings oriented outward, which mediate intermolecular pi-pi stacking interactions and eventually facilitate highly crystalline bionanosphere assembly with both thermal and chemical stability. The self-assembled bionanospheres spontaneously pack into a hexagonal monolayer at the evaporating solvent edge, constituting evaporation-induced hierarchical self-assembly. Metal nanoparticle arrays or embossed Si nanoposts could be successfully created from the hexagonal bionanosphere array masks in conjunction with a conventional metal-evaporation or etching process. Our approach represents a bionanofabrication concept that biomolecular self-assembly is hierarchically directed to establish a straightforward nanolithography compatible with conventional device-fabrication processes.

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