Bottom‐up fabrication using DNA is a promising approach for the creation of nanoarchitectures. Accordingly, nanomaterials with specific electronic, photonic, or other functions are precisely and programmably positioned on DNA nanostructures from a disordered collection of smaller parts. These self‐assembled structures offer significant potential in many domains such as sensing, drug delivery, and electronic device manufacturing. This review describes recent progress in organizing nanoscale morphologies of metals, semiconductors, and carbon nanotubes using DNA templates. We describe common substrates, DNA templates, seeding, plating, nanomaterial placement, and methods for structural and electrical characterization. Finally, our outlook for DNA-enabled bottom‐up nanofabrication of materials is presented.
CITATION STYLE
Pang, C., Aryal, B. R., Ranasinghe, D. R., Westover, T. R., Ehlert, A. E. F., Harb, J. N., … Woolley, A. T. (2021, July 1). Bottom‐up fabrication of dna‐templated electronic nanomaterials and their characterization. Nanomaterials. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11071655
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.