Difference in predictions of piezoelectric coefficients for dsDNA films with different nucleotide numbers and the same packing density η  =  0.6  ×  10¹⁷ chain m⁻², prepared by nano-grafting and self-assembling technologies. The left y axis is related to the self-assembled DNA and the right one is related to the nano-grafted DNA.

Difference in predictions of piezoelectric coefficients for dsDNA films with different nucleotide numbers and the same packing density η  =  0.6  ×  10¹⁷ chain m⁻², prepared by nano-grafting and self-assembling technologies. The left y axis is related to the self-assembled DNA and the right one is related to the nano-grafted DNA.

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The adsorption of charged biomolecules on a substrate will trigger a self-induced electric potential field that could deflect microcantilever biosensors in the nanometer regime. The paper is devoted to a multiscale characterization of the piezoelectric coefficient of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) films with microscopic attractive interactions in mult...

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... With a decrease in NaCl concentration, the surface stress changes from repulsion to gravitation, and the value increases gradually. In 2017, Wu et al. [113] pointed out that, due to the competition between microgravity and repulsion, the piezoelectric coefficient of the low-density dsDNA film in the multivalent salt solution is negative, while the piezoelectric coefficient of the high-density film is positive. In addition, the piezoelectric coefficient change is closely related to the microcantilever signal. ...
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... Different from the previous analysis of piezoelectric properties of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) films and its effect on the static detection signals of microcantilevers [16], this paper is devoted to the establishment of a multiscale model to characterize the macroscale elastic properties of dsDNA films and their correlations with the anomalous dynamic detection signals of hinged-hinged microbeams induced by micro-interactions. First, two mesoscopic potentials of free energy for a repulsion-dominated dsDNA film in NaCl solution or attraction-dominated dsDNA films in multivalent salt solutions are used to predict their elastic properties, including surface stress and elastic modulus. ...
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The condensation of DNA helices has been regularly found in cell nucleus, bacterial nucleoids, and viral capsids, and during its relevant biodetections the attractive interactions between DNA helices could not be neglected. In this letter, we theoretically characterize the elastic properties of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) self-assembled 2D films and their multiscale correlations with the dynamic detection signals of DNA-microbeams. The comparison of attraction- and repulsion-dominated DNA films shows that the competition between attractive and repulsive micro-interactions endows dsDNA films in multivalent salt solutions with anomalous elastic properties such as tensile surface stresses and negative moduli; the occurrence of the tensile surface stress for the attraction-dominated DNA self-assembled film reveals the possible physical mechanism of the condensation found in organism. Furthermore, dynamic analyses of a hinged–hinged DNA-microbeam reveal non-monotonous frequency shifts due to attraction- or repulsion-dominated dsDNA adsorptions and dynamic instability occurrence during the detections of repulsion-dominated DNA films. This dynamic instability implies the existence of a sensitive interval of material parameters in which DNA adsorptions will induce a drastic natural frequency shift or a jump of vibration mode even with a tiny variation of the detection conditions. These new insights might provide us some potential guidance to achieve an ultra-highly sensitive biodetection method in the future.
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