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Impact of Surface Chemistry and Doping Concentrations on Biofunctionalization of GaN/Ga‒In‒N Quantum Wells

The development of sensitive biosensors, such as gallium nitride (GaN)-based quantum wells, transistors, etc., often makes it necessary to functionalize GaN surfaces with small molecules or even biomolecules, such as proteins. As a first step in surface functionalization, we have investigated silane...

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Autores principales: Naskar, Nilanjon, Schneidereit, Martin F., Huber, Florian, Chakrabortty, Sabyasachi, Veith, Lothar, Mezger, Markus, Kirste, Lutz, Fuchs, Theo, Diemant, Thomas, Weil, Tanja, Behm, R. Jürgen, Thonke, Klaus, Scholz, Ferdinand
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7435836/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32731347
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20154179
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author Naskar, Nilanjon
Schneidereit, Martin F.
Huber, Florian
Chakrabortty, Sabyasachi
Veith, Lothar
Mezger, Markus
Kirste, Lutz
Fuchs, Theo
Diemant, Thomas
Weil, Tanja
Behm, R. Jürgen
Thonke, Klaus
Scholz, Ferdinand
author_facet Naskar, Nilanjon
Schneidereit, Martin F.
Huber, Florian
Chakrabortty, Sabyasachi
Veith, Lothar
Mezger, Markus
Kirste, Lutz
Fuchs, Theo
Diemant, Thomas
Weil, Tanja
Behm, R. Jürgen
Thonke, Klaus
Scholz, Ferdinand
author_sort Naskar, Nilanjon
collection PubMed
description The development of sensitive biosensors, such as gallium nitride (GaN)-based quantum wells, transistors, etc., often makes it necessary to functionalize GaN surfaces with small molecules or even biomolecules, such as proteins. As a first step in surface functionalization, we have investigated silane adsorption, as well as the formation of very thin silane layers. In the next step, the immobilization of the tetrameric protein streptavidin (as well as the attachment of chemically modified iron transport protein ferritin (ferritin-biotin-rhodamine complex)) was realized on these films. The degree of functionalization of the GaN surfaces was determined by fluorescence measurements with fluorescent-labeled proteins; silane film thickness and surface roughness were estimated, and also other surface sensitive techniques were applied. The formation of a monolayer consisting of adsorbed organosilanes was accomplished on Mg-doped GaN surfaces, and also functionalization with proteins was achieved. We found that very high Mg doping reduced the amount of surface functionalized proteins. Most likely, this finding was a consequence of the lower concentration of ionizable Mg atoms in highly Mg-doped layers as a consequence of self-compensation effects. In summary, we could demonstrate the necessity of Mg doping for achieving reasonable bio-functionalization of GaN surfaces.
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spelling pubmed-74358362020-08-25 Impact of Surface Chemistry and Doping Concentrations on Biofunctionalization of GaN/Ga‒In‒N Quantum Wells Naskar, Nilanjon Schneidereit, Martin F. Huber, Florian Chakrabortty, Sabyasachi Veith, Lothar Mezger, Markus Kirste, Lutz Fuchs, Theo Diemant, Thomas Weil, Tanja Behm, R. Jürgen Thonke, Klaus Scholz, Ferdinand Sensors (Basel) Article The development of sensitive biosensors, such as gallium nitride (GaN)-based quantum wells, transistors, etc., often makes it necessary to functionalize GaN surfaces with small molecules or even biomolecules, such as proteins. As a first step in surface functionalization, we have investigated silane adsorption, as well as the formation of very thin silane layers. In the next step, the immobilization of the tetrameric protein streptavidin (as well as the attachment of chemically modified iron transport protein ferritin (ferritin-biotin-rhodamine complex)) was realized on these films. The degree of functionalization of the GaN surfaces was determined by fluorescence measurements with fluorescent-labeled proteins; silane film thickness and surface roughness were estimated, and also other surface sensitive techniques were applied. The formation of a monolayer consisting of adsorbed organosilanes was accomplished on Mg-doped GaN surfaces, and also functionalization with proteins was achieved. We found that very high Mg doping reduced the amount of surface functionalized proteins. Most likely, this finding was a consequence of the lower concentration of ionizable Mg atoms in highly Mg-doped layers as a consequence of self-compensation effects. In summary, we could demonstrate the necessity of Mg doping for achieving reasonable bio-functionalization of GaN surfaces. MDPI 2020-07-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7435836/ /pubmed/32731347 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20154179 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Naskar, Nilanjon
Schneidereit, Martin F.
Huber, Florian
Chakrabortty, Sabyasachi
Veith, Lothar
Mezger, Markus
Kirste, Lutz
Fuchs, Theo
Diemant, Thomas
Weil, Tanja
Behm, R. Jürgen
Thonke, Klaus
Scholz, Ferdinand
Impact of Surface Chemistry and Doping Concentrations on Biofunctionalization of GaN/Ga‒In‒N Quantum Wells
title Impact of Surface Chemistry and Doping Concentrations on Biofunctionalization of GaN/Ga‒In‒N Quantum Wells
title_full Impact of Surface Chemistry and Doping Concentrations on Biofunctionalization of GaN/Ga‒In‒N Quantum Wells
title_fullStr Impact of Surface Chemistry and Doping Concentrations on Biofunctionalization of GaN/Ga‒In‒N Quantum Wells
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Surface Chemistry and Doping Concentrations on Biofunctionalization of GaN/Ga‒In‒N Quantum Wells
title_short Impact of Surface Chemistry and Doping Concentrations on Biofunctionalization of GaN/Ga‒In‒N Quantum Wells
title_sort impact of surface chemistry and doping concentrations on biofunctionalization of gan/ga‒in‒n quantum wells
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7435836/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32731347
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20154179
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