TY - JOUR
T1 - Solid-State Electron Transport via the Protein Azurin is Temperature-Independent Down to 4 K
AU - Kayser, Ben
AU - Fereiro, Jerry A.
AU - Bhattacharyya, Rajarshi
AU - Cohen, Sidney R.
AU - Vilan, Ayelet
AU - Pecht, Israel
AU - Sheves, Mordechai
AU - Cahen, David
N1 - Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/1/2
Y1 - 2020/1/2
N2 - Solid-state electronic transport (ETp) via the electron-transfer copper protein azurin (Az) was measured in Au/Az/Au junction configurations down to 4 K, the lowest temperature for solid-state protein-based junctions. Not only does lowering the temperature help when observing fine features of electronic transport, but it also limits possible electron transport mechanisms. Practically, wire-bonded devices-on-chip, carrying Az-based microscopic junctions, were measured in liquid He, minimizing temperature gradients across the samples. Much smaller junctions, in conducting-probe atomic force microscopy measurements, served, between room temperature and the protein's denaturation temperature (similar to 323 K), to check that conductance behavior is independent of device configuration or contact nature and thus is a property of the protein itself. Temperature-independent currents were observed from similar to 320 to 4 K. The experimental results were fitted to a single-level Landauer model to extract effective energy barrier and electrode-molecule coupling strength values and to compare data sets. Our results strongly support that quantum tunneling, rather than hopping, dominates ETp via Az.
AB - Solid-state electronic transport (ETp) via the electron-transfer copper protein azurin (Az) was measured in Au/Az/Au junction configurations down to 4 K, the lowest temperature for solid-state protein-based junctions. Not only does lowering the temperature help when observing fine features of electronic transport, but it also limits possible electron transport mechanisms. Practically, wire-bonded devices-on-chip, carrying Az-based microscopic junctions, were measured in liquid He, minimizing temperature gradients across the samples. Much smaller junctions, in conducting-probe atomic force microscopy measurements, served, between room temperature and the protein's denaturation temperature (similar to 323 K), to check that conductance behavior is independent of device configuration or contact nature and thus is a property of the protein itself. Temperature-independent currents were observed from similar to 320 to 4 K. The experimental results were fitted to a single-level Landauer model to extract effective energy barrier and electrode-molecule coupling strength values and to compare data sets. Our results strongly support that quantum tunneling, rather than hopping, dominates ETp via Az.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85077127811&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b03120
DO - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b03120
M3 - مقالة
C2 - 31821001
SN - 1948-7185
VL - 11
SP - 144
EP - 151
JO - Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters
JF - Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters
IS - 1
ER -