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Dive into the research topics where Shuai Chang is active.

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Featured researches published by Shuai Chang.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2010

Identifying single bases in a DNA oligomer with electron tunnelling

Shuo Huang; Jin He; Shuai Chang; Peiming Zhang; Feng Liang; Shengqin Li; Michael Tuchband; Alexander Fuhrmann; Robert Ros; Stuart Lindsay

It has been proposed that single molecules of DNA could be sequenced by measuring the physical properties of the bases as they pass through a nanopore. Theoretical calculations suggest that electron tunnelling can identify bases in single-stranded DNA without enzymatic processing, and it was recently experimentally shown that tunnelling can sense individual nucleotides and nucleosides. Here, we report that tunnelling electrodes functionalized with recognition reagents can identify a single base flanked by other bases in short DNA oligomers. The residence time of a single base in a recognition junction is on the order of a second, but pulling the DNA through the junction with a force of tens of piconewtons would yield reading speeds of tens of bases per second.


Nano Letters | 2010

Electronic signatures of all four DNA nucleosides in a tunneling gap.

Shuai Chang; Shuo Huang; Jin He; Feng Liang; Peiming Zhang; Shengqing Li; Xiang Chen; Otto F. Sankey; Stuart Lindsay

Nucleosides diffusing through a 2 nm electron-tunneling junction generate current spikes of sub-millisecond duration with a broad distribution of peak currents. This distribution narrows 10-fold when one of the electrodes is functionalized with a reagent that traps nucleosides in a specific orientation with hydrogen bonds. Functionalizing the second electrode reduces contact resistance to the nucleosides, allowing them to be identified via their peak currents according to deoxyadenosine > deoxycytidine > deoxyguanosine > thymidine, in agreement with the order predicted by a density functional calculation.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2009

Tunnelling readout of hydrogen-bonding-based recognition

Shuai Chang; Jin He; Ashley Kibel; Myeong H. Lee; Otto F. Sankey; Peiming Zhang; Stuart Lindsay

Hydrogen bonding has a ubiquitous role in electron transport1,2 and in molecular recognition, with DNA base-pairing being the best known example.3 Scanning tunneling microscope (STM) images4 and measurements of the decay of tunnel-current as a molecular junction is pulled apart by the STM tip, 5 are sensitive to hydrogen-bonded interactions. Here we show that these tunnel-decay signals can be used to measure the strength of hydrogen bonding in DNA basepairs. Junctions that are held together by three hydrogen bonds per basepair (e.g., guanine-cytosine interactions) are stiffer than junctions held together by two hydrogen bonds per basepair (e.g., adenine-thymine interactions). Similar, but less-pronounced, effects are observed on the approach of the tunneling probe, implying that hydrogen-bond dependent attractive forces also have a role in determining the rise of current. These effects provide new mechanisms for making sensors that transduce a molecular recognition event into an electronic signal.


Nanotechnology | 2012

Chemical recognition and binding kinetics in a functionalized tunnel junction

Shuai Chang; Shuo Huang; Hao Liu; Peiming Zhang; Feng Liang; Rena Akahori; Shengqin Li; Brett Gyarfas; John Shumway; Brian Ashcroft; Jin He; Stuart Lindsay

4(5)-(2-mercaptoethyl)-1H-imidazole-2-carboxamide is a molecule that has multiple hydrogen bonding sites and a short flexible linker. When tethered to a pair of electrodes, it traps target molecules in a tunnel junction. Surprisingly large recognition-tunneling signals are generated for all naturally occurring DNA bases A, C, G, T and 5-methyl-cytosine. Tunnel current spikes are stochastic and broadly distributed, but characteristic enough so that individual bases can be identified as a tunneling probe is scanned over DNA oligomers. Each base yields a recognizable burst of signal, the duration of which is controlled entirely by the probe speed, down to speeds of 1 nm s -1, implying a maximum off-rate of 3 s -1 for the recognition complex. The same measurements yield a lower bound on the on-rate of 1 M -1 s -1. Despite the stochastic nature of the signals, an optimized multiparameter fit allows base calling from a single signal peak with an accuracy that can exceed 80% when a single type of nucleotide is present in the junction, meaning that recognition-tunneling is capable of true single-molecule analysis. The accuracy increases to 95% when multiple spikes in a signal cluster are analyzed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Gap distance and interactions in a molecular tunnel junction.

Shuai Chang; Jin He; Peiming Zhang; Brett Gyarfas; Stuart Lindsay

The distance between electrodes in a tunnel junction cannot be determined from the external movement applied to the electrodes because of interfacial forces that distort the electrode geometry at the nanoscale. These distortions become particularly complex when molecules are present in the junction, as demonstrated here by measurements of the AC response of a molecular junction over a range of conductivities from microsiemens to picosiemens. Specific chemical interactions within the junction lead to distinct features in break-junction data, and these have been used to determine the electrode separation in a junction functionalized with 4(5)-(2-mercaptoethyl)-1H-imidazole-2-carboxamide, a reagent developed for reading DNA sequences.


Nanotechnology | 2009

Tunnel conductance of Watson–Crick nucleoside–base pairs from telegraph noise

Shuai Chang; Jin He; Lisha Lin; Peiming Zhang; Feng Liang; Michael Young; Shuo Huang; Stuart Lindsay

The use of tunneling signals to sequence DNA is presently hampered by the small tunnel conductance of a junction spanning an entire DNA molecule. The design of a readout system that uses a shorter tunneling path requires knowledge of the absolute conductance across base pairs. We have exploited the stochastic switching of hydrogen-bonded DNA base-nucleoside pairs trapped in a tunnel junction to determine the conductance of individual molecular pairs. This conductance is found to be sensitive to the geometry of the junction, but a subset of the data appears to come from unstrained molecular pairs. The conductances determined from these pairs are within a factor of two of the predictions of density functional calculations. The experimental data reproduces the counterintuitive theoretical prediction that guanine-deoxycytidine pairs (3 H-bonds) have a smaller conductance than adenine-thymine pairs (2 H-bonds). A bimodal distribution of switching lifetimes shows that both H-bonds and molecule-metal contacts break.


Nanotechnology | 2012

Palladium electrodes for molecular tunnel junctions

Shuai Chang; Suman Sen; Peiming Zhang; Brett Gyarfas; Brian Ashcroft; Steven Lefkowitz; Hongbo Peng; Stuart Lindsay

Gold has been the metal of choice for research on molecular tunneling junctions, but it is incompatible with complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor fabrication because it forms deep level traps in silicon. Palladium electrodes do not contaminate silicon, and also give higher tunnel current signals in the molecular tunnel junctions that we have studied. The result is cleaner signals in a recognition-tunneling junction that recognizes the four natural DNA bases as well as 5-methyl cytosine, with no spurious background signals. More than 75% of all the recorded signal peaks indicate the base correctly.


ACS Nano | 2016

Simultaneous Ionic Current and Potential Detection of Nanoparticles by a Multifunctional Nanopipette

Namuna Panday; Gongming Qian; Xuewen Wang; Shuai Chang; Popular Pandey; Jin He

Nanopore sensing-based technologies have made significant progress for single molecule and single nanoparticle detection and analysis. In recent years, multimode sensing by multifunctional nanopores shows the potential to greatly improve the sensitivity and selectivity of traditional resistive-pulse sensing methods. In this paper, we showed that two label-free electric sensing modes could work cooperatively to detect the motion of 40 nm diameter spherical gold nanoparticles (GNPs) in solution by a multifunctional nanopipette. The multifunctional nanopipettes containing both nanopore and nanoelectrode (pyrolytic carbon) at the tip were fabricated quickly and cheaply. We demonstrated that the ionic current and local electrical potential changes could be detected simultaneously during the translocation of individual GNPs. We also showed that the nanopore/CNE tip geometry enabled the CNE not only to detect the translocation of single GNP but also to collectively detect several GNPs outside the nanopore entrance. The dynamic accumulation of GNPs near the nanopore entrance resulted in no detectable current changes, but was detected by the potential changes at the CNE. We revealed the motions of GNPs both outside and inside the nanopore, individually and collectively, with the combination of ionic current and potential measurements.


Archive | 2011

Controlled tunnel gap device for sequencing polymers

Stuart Lindsay; Shuai Chang; Jin He; Peiming Zhang; Shuo Huang


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2010

Recognition Tunneling Measurement of the Conductance of DNA Bases Embedded in Self-Assembled Monolayers†

Shuo Huang; Shuai Chang; Jin He; Peiming Zhang; Feng Liang; Michael Tuchband; Shengqing Li; Stuart Lindsay

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Jin He

Florida International University

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Peiming Zhang

Arizona State University

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Stuart Lindsay

Arizona State University

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Shuo Huang

Arizona State University

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Feng Liang

Arizona State University

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Brett Gyarfas

Arizona State University

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Otto F. Sankey

Arizona State University

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Xuewen Wang

Florida International University

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Ashley Kibel

Arizona State University

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Brian Ashcroft

Arizona State University

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