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Molecular tilt-dependent and tyrosine-enhanced electron transfer across ITO/SAM/[DPPC-Au NP-Tyrosine] Janus nanoparticle junction

Year: 2016

Journal: J. Nanopart. Res.

Authors: Sarangi, NK; Patnaik, A

Enhanced interfacial electron transfer ( ET) across the otherwise insulating indium tin oxide/ alkanethiol self-assembled monolayer ( SAM)/redox molecule junction was accomplished when a Janus gold nanoparticle ( JNP) protected by bioinspired phosphatidylcholine ( DPPC) lipid and tyrosine amino acid ligands was anchored on it. In addition to the most theoretical and experimental investigations on the distance-dependent ET across Metal-Organic SAM-Nanoparticle ( NP) architectures, the current results succinctly illustrate molecular tilt angle of the SAM and the characteristic of JNP as key factors in expediting the ET rate via electron tunneling. In the absence of JNP, electron tunneling with a tunneling factor beta = 1.1 angstrom(-1) across the SAM was the ratelimiting step, evidenced from electrochemical impedance spectroscopy ( EIS). The apparent electron transfer rate constant (kappa(0)(app)) for anchored SAM was enhanced by at least one order of magnitude than the DPPC-only protected nanoparticle, suggesting the potential role of tyrosine towards the enhanced ET. The asymmetric and biogenic nature of the construct sheds light on a potential bioelectronic device for novel electronic attributes.