Random Walks in Disordered Environments: Membrane-Induced Confinement of DNA
ORAL
Abstract
Understanding the conformation and dynamics of DNA in nanoslit structures is a topic of long-standing interest in the physics of nanoconfined polymers, yet introducing molecules into the most confined (sub 20 nm thick) structures is very challenging. Here we use a pneumatically-actuated membrane device to sandwich single DNA molecules between a flexible nitride flap and glass nanochannel floor, forcing the molecules into a degree of confinement limited only by the intrinsic roughness of the channel surfaces. In these environments the molecule undergoes a self-avoiding random walk in the disordered environment created by the surface roughness. We study single-molecule dynamics and conformation as a function of root-mean-square surface roughness and imposed confinement.
*Natural Sci. and Eng. Research Council of Canada (NSERC) Discovery Grants Program (Grant No. RGPIN 386212) and the Fonds de recherche du Quebec Nature et technologies (FQRNT) Projet d'equipe (PR-180418)
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Presenters
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Xavier Capaldi
- McGill University
- Physics department, McGill University