Biofunctionalization of Si(111)7×7 by “Renewable” l‑Cysteine Transitional Layer

Surface functionalization of an inorganic surface with bio-organic molecules is often aimed at creating a “permanent” bio-organic surface with receptor functional groups. We show here that l-cysteine can be used to transform a highly reactive Si(111)7×7 surface to not just a permanent bio-organic su...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2014-12, Vol.136 (48), p.16909-16918
Hauptverfasser: Rahsepar, Fatemeh R, Zhang, Lei, Farkhondeh, Hanieh, Leung, K. T
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container_end_page 16918
container_issue 48
container_start_page 16909
container_title Journal of the American Chemical Society
container_volume 136
creator Rahsepar, Fatemeh R
Zhang, Lei
Farkhondeh, Hanieh
Leung, K. T
description Surface functionalization of an inorganic surface with bio-organic molecules is often aimed at creating a “permanent” bio-organic surface with receptor functional groups. We show here that l-cysteine can be used to transform a highly reactive Si(111)7×7 surface to not just a permanent bio-organic surface but also a semipermanent (or renewable) and a temporary bio-organic surfaces by manipulating the exposure. In the early growth stage, the strong bonding between the first cysteine adlayer and the Si substrate through Si–N or Si–S linkages in unidentate or bidentate arrangement provides permanent biofunctionalization by this interfacial layer. This interfacial layer can be used to build a transitional layer (second adlayer) mediated by interlayer vertical hydrogen bonding between an amino group and a carboxylic acid group. Further exposure of cysteine eventually leads to a zwitterionic multilayer film involving electrostatic interactions between cation (−NH3 +) and anion moieties (−COO–). The interlayer hydrogen bonding therefore provides temporary trapping of bio-organic molecules as the second transitional layer that is stable up to 175 °C. This transitional layer can be easily removed by annealing above this temperature and then regenerated with the same molecular layer or a different one by “renewing” the interlayer hydrogen bonds. We also illustrate coverage-dependent adsorption structures of cysteine, from bidentate to unidentate attachments and to self-assembled multimers, involving formation of intralayer horizontal N···H–O hydrogen bonds, by combining our X-ray photoemission data with the local density-of-state images obtained by scanning tunnelling microscopy.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/ja509264t
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subjects Cysteine - chemistry
Hydrogen Bonding
Silicon - chemistry
Surface Properties
title Biofunctionalization of Si(111)7×7 by “Renewable” l‑Cysteine Transitional Layer
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