Abstract
Single-molecule measurement techniques have illuminated unprecedented details of chemical behavior, including observations of the motion of a single molecule on a surface, and even the vibration of a single bond within a molecule. Such measurements are critical to our understanding of entities ranging from single atoms to the most complex protein assemblies. We provide an overview of the strikingly diverse classes of measurements that can be used to quantify single-molecule properties, including those of single macromolecules and single molecular assemblies, and discuss the quantitative insights they provide. Examples are drawn from across the single-molecule literature, ranging from ultrahigh vacuum scanning tunneling microscopy studies of adsorbate diffusion on surfaces to fluorescence studies of protein conformational changes in solution. © 2011 American Chemical Society.
Author supplied keywords
- Förster resonance energy transfer
- atomic force microscopy
- electron spin resonance
- fluorescence
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance force microscopy
- nitrogen vacancy
- optical microscopy
- photoactivation light microscopy
- scanning tunneling microscopy
- single molecule
- spin
- subdiffraction microscopy
- transmission electron microscopy
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Claridge, S. A., Schwartz, J. J., & Weiss, P. S. (2011). Electrons, photons, and force: Quantitative single-molecule measurements from physics to biology. ACS Nano, 5(2), 693–729. https://doi.org/10.1021/nn103298x
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