Software lets researchers create tiny rounded objects out of DNA. Here’s why that’s cool

Phys.org  December 23, 2022 A team of researchers in the US (Duke University, UCSF, Arizona State University, Rutgers University, NCAR) has developed and automated the application of a set of previously unknown design principles that now includes a multilayer design for closed and curved DNA nanostructures to resolve past obstacles in shape selection, yield, mechanical rigidity, and accessibility. The objects were made from threadlike molecules of DNA, bent, and folded into complex three-dimensional objects with nanometer precision. They designed, analyzed, and experimentally demonstrated a set of diverse 3D curved nanoarchitectures, showing planar asymmetry and examining partial multilayer designs. The automated […]

DNA origami enables fabricating superconducting nanowires

Science Daily  January 19, 2021 An international team of researchers (Israel, Germany, USA – Columbia University, Brookhaven National Laboratory) used DNA origami as the platform to build superconducting nanoarchitectures which involves two major components: a circular single-strand DNA as the scaffold, and a mix of complementary short strands acting as staples that determine the shape of the structure. The DNA nanowires were dropcast onto a substrate with a channel and coated with superconducting niobium nitride to convert them into conductive wires. The nanowires were suspended over the channel to isolate them from the substrate during the electrical measurements. Superconducting wires […]