Over One Million DNA and Protein Events Through Ultra-Stable Chemically-Tuned Solid-State Nanopores |
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Authors: | Jugal Saharia Yapa Mudiyanselage Nuwan Dhananjaya Yapa Bandara Buddini Iroshika Karawdeniya Jason Rodger Dwyer Min Jun Kim |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX, 75275 USA;2. Research School of Chemistry, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 2601 Australia;3. Department of Electronic Materials Engineering, Research School of Physics, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 2601 Australia;4. Department of Chemistry, University of Rhode Island, 140 Flagg Road, Kingston, RI, 02881 USA |
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Abstract: | Stability, long lifetime, resilience against clogging, low noise, and low cost are five critical cornerstones of solid-state nanopore technology. Here, a fabrication protocol is described wherein >1 million events are obtained from a single solid-state nanopore with both DNA and protein at the highest available lowpass filter (LPF, 100 kHz) of the Axopatch 200B–the highest event count mentioned in literature. Moreover, a total of ≈8.1 million events are reported in this work encompassing the two analyte classes. With the 100 kHz LPF, the temporally attenuated population is negligible while with the more ubiquitous 10 kHz, ≈91% of the events are attenuated. With DNA experiments, the pores are operational for hours (typically >7 h) while the average pore growth is merely ≈0.16 ± 0.1 nm h−1. The current noise is exceptionally stable with traces typically showing <10 pA h−1 increase in noise. Furthermore, a real-time method to clean and revive pores clogged with analyte with the added benefit of minimal pore growth during cleaning (< 5% of the original diameter) is showcased. The enormity of the data collected herein presents a significant advancement to solid-state pore performance and will be useful for future ventures such as machine learning where large amounts of pristine data are a prerequisite. |
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Keywords: | high-lifetime low-noise million events nanopores ultra-stable |
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