Electron Transfer in Myoglobin-based Single-Electron Transistors

ORAL

Abstract

The mechanism of electron transfer by myoglobin was investigated using nanometer-gap platinum electrodes fabricated by breaking a small junction by electromigration at cryogenic temperatures. The experimental results suggest single electron transport behavior is mediated by resonance of the electronic levels of the heme group in a single myoglobin protein. Evidence for a two-step electron tunneling process, resulting from the structural relaxation of the protein with the addition of a single electron, was observed. Our experimental results show that the slow protein relaxation may result in resonant tunneling and the fast protein relaxation is the condition of two-step resonant tunneling behavior. The conformation and orientation of myoglobin in the gap of electrodes may significantly affect the conductance of these devices. The calculation for the conductance graph as a function of gate voltage and bias voltage was performed with the rate equations for electron tunneling via discrete quantum states and considering the two-step process. The results of calculation match those of our experiment.

*Supported by National Science Foundation (grant EPS-0314742) and the West Virginia University WVNano Initiative.

Authors

  • Debin Li

    • Dept. of Physics, West Virginia University
  • Peter Gannett

    • Basic Pharmaceutical Sciences, West Virginia University
  • David Lederman

    • Dept. of Physics, West Virginia University
    • West Virginia University