Diamond, because of its electrical and chemical properties, may be a suitable material for integrated sensing and signal processing. But methods to control chemical or biological modifications on diamond surfaces have not been established. Here, we show that nanocrystalline diamond thin-films covalently modified with DNA oligonucleotides provide an extremely stable, highly selective platform in subsequent surface hybridization processes. We used a photochemical modification scheme to chemically modify clean, H-terminated nanocrystalline diamond surfaces grown on silicon substrates, producing a homogeneous layer of amine groups that serve as sites for DNA attachment. After linking DNA to the amine groups, hybridization reactions with fluorescently tagged complementary and non-complementary oligonucleotides showed no detectable non-specific adsorption, with extremely good selectivity between matched and mismatched sequences. Comparison of DNA-modified ultra-nanocrystalline diamond films with other commonly used surfaces for biological modification, such as gold, silicon, glass and glassy carbon, showed that diamond is unique in its ability to achieve very high stability and sensitivity while also being compatible with microelectronics processing technologies. These results suggest that diamond thin-films may be a nearly ideal substrate for integration of microelectronics with biological modification and sensing.
Ultrananocrystalline diamond (UNCD) films with up to 0.2% total nitrogen content were synthesized by a microwave plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor-deposition method using a CH4(1%)/Ar gas mixture and 1%–20% nitrogen gas added. The electrical conductivity of the nitrogen-doped UNCD films increases by five orders of magnitude (up to 143 Ω−1 cm−1) with increasing nitrogen content. Conductivity and Hall measurements made as a function of film temperature down to 4.2 K indicate that these films have the highest n-type conductivity and carrier concentration demonstrated for phase-pure diamond thin films. Grain-boundary conduction is proposed to explain the remarkable transport properties of these films.
The IBM/TENN/TULANE/LLNL/LBL Beamline 8.0 at the advanced light source combining a 5.0 cm, 89 period undulator with a high-throughput, high-resolution spherical grating monochromator, provides a powerful excitation source over a spectral range of 70-1200 eV for surface physics and material science research. The beamline progress and the first experimental results obtained with a fluorescence end station on graphite and titanium oxides are presented here. The dispersive features in K emission spectra of graphite excited near threshold, and found a clear relationship between them and graphite band structure are observed. The monochromator is operated at a resolving power of roughly 2000, while the spectrometer has a resolving power of 400 for these fluorescence experiments. Q
The transport properties of diamond thin films are well known to be sensitive to the sp2/sp3-bonded carbon ratio, the presence of the grain boundaries and other defects, and to the presence of various impurities. In order to clarify the roles these factors play in the conduction mechanisms of nitrogen-doped ultrananocrystalline diamond (UNCD), Raman scattering, near edge x-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS), soft x-ray fluorescence (SXF), and secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS) measurements were performed. Transmission electron microscopy analysis of nitrogen doped UNCD has previously indicated that the films are composed of crystalline diamond nano-grains with boundaries of amorphous carbon, and NEXAFS measurements reveal that the global amount of sp2-bonded carbon in these films increases slightly with nitrogen doping. The nitrogen content is quantified with high-resolution SIMS analysis, while NEXAFS and SXF indicates that the nitrogen exists primarily in tetrahedrally coordinated sites. These measurements indicate that the overall grain boundary volume of nitrogen-doped ultrananocrystalline diamond is increasing, while the grains themselves remain pure diamond. This supports our previously reported hypothesis that grain boundary conduction is the mechanism for the observed increase in conductivity in ultrananocrystalline diamond with nitrogen doping.
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