Engineering nanometre-scale coherence in soft matter.
Electronic delocalization in redox-active polymers may be disrupted by the heterogeneity of the environment that surrounds each monomer. When the differences in monomer redox-potential induced by the environment are small (as compared with the monomer-monomer electronic interactions), delocalization persists. Here we show that guanine (G) runs in double-stranded DNA support delocalization over 4-5 guanine bases. The weak interaction between delocalized G blocks on opposite DNA strands is known to support partially coherent long-range charge transport. The molecular-resolution model developed here finds that the coherence among these G blocks follows an even-odd orbital-symmetry rule and predicts that weakening the interaction between G blocks exaggerates the resistance oscillations. These findings indicate how sequence can be exploited to change the balance between coherent and incoherent transport. The predictions are tested and confirmed using break-junction experiments. Thus, tailored orbital symmetry and structural fluctuations may be used to produce coherent transport with a length scale of multiple nanometres in soft-matter assemblies, a length scale comparable to that of small proteins.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Quantum Theory
- Organic Chemistry
- Nucleic Acid Conformation
- Guanine
- Electrons
- Electric Conductivity
- DNA
- 34 Chemical sciences
- 03 Chemical Sciences
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Quantum Theory
- Organic Chemistry
- Nucleic Acid Conformation
- Guanine
- Electrons
- Electric Conductivity
- DNA
- 34 Chemical sciences
- 03 Chemical Sciences