News

Seminar András Berkó
15/11/2010 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Seminar Martin Svec
14/11/2010 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Seminar P. de Andres 5/10/10
5/10/2010 10:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

2nd QPlus workshop 8/10/10
2nd International QPlus Workshop 8.10.2010 »more info

Seminar Y. J. Dappe 25/5/10
25/5/2010 10:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Seminar J. Repp 13/4/2010
14/3/2010 15:00 (Seminarni mistnost budova A) »more info

Seminar T. Novotny 2/3/2010
»more info

Seminar R. Martonak 23/2/10
»more info

4/2/10 Colloquium S. Lindsay
»more info

18/1/10 Our work highlighted on Nanotech.org website.
»more info

30/12/09 Our paper about atomic contrast of KPFM published in PRL
»more info

Seminar J.P. Lewis 9/12/09 14:00
»more info

Seminar P. Kocan 25/11/09 15:00
»more info

14.-15.10. 2009 workshop "Simultaneous STM/AFM measurements using tuning fork based sensors"
»more info

4/2/10 Colloquium S. Lindsay

Can we exploit quantum mechanics to read genes?

S. Lindsay
Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University

Electron tunneling is exponentially sensitive to the position of atoms in a tunnel gap, giving it enormous potential for interfacing chemistry with electronics. However, it is also very sensitive to contamination and thermal fluctuations. To make it work in conditions compatible with biology, we are exploring schemes where reagents, chemically tethered to sensing electrodes, capture their targets by forming hydrogen bonds with them, clamping the target in place and completing an electron tunneling path through the target. The recent discovery that single walled carbon nanotubes can be used as conducting nanopores might enable a new type of rapid single molecule DNA sequencing.