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Recording and Revealing 2.5D Nanopatterned Hidden Information on Silk Protein Bioresists

Authors
Lee, Tae-YunChoi, JuwanLee, SoohoonJeon, HeonsuKim, Sunghwan
Issue Date
Nov-2024
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
Keywords
electron-beam lithography; nanopattern; polymorphic transition; security information; silk protein
Citation
SMALL, v.20, no.44, pp 1 - 10
Pages
10
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
SMALL
Volume
20
Number
44
Start Page
1
End Page
10
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/213097
DOI
10.1002/smll.202403169
ISSN
1613-6810
1613-6829
Abstract
Nanopatterning on biomaterials has attracted significant attention as it can lead to the development of biomedical devices capable of performing diagnostic and therapeutic functions while being biocompatible. Among various nanopatterning techniques, electron-beam lithography (EBL) enables precise and versatile nanopatterning in desired shapes. Various biomaterials are successfully nanopatterned as bioresists by using EBL. However, the use of high-energy electron beams (e-beams) for high-resolutive patterning has incorporated functional materials and has caused adverse effects on biomaterials. Moreover, the scattering of electrons not absorbed by the bioresist leads to proximity effects, thus deteriorating pattern quality. Herein, EBL-based nanopatterning is reported by inducing molecular degradation of amorphous silk fibroin, followed by selectively inducing secondary structures. High-resolution EBL nanopatterning is achievable, even at low-energy e-beam (5 keV) and low doses, as it minimizes the proximity effect and enables precise 2.5D nanopatterning via grayscale lithography. Additionally, integrating nanophotonic structures into fluorescent material-containing silk allows for fluorescence amplification. Furthermore, this post-exposure cross-linking way indicates that the silk bioresist can maintain nanopatterned information stored in silk molecules in the amorphous state, utilizing for the secure storage of nanopatterned information as a security patch. Based on the fabrication technique, versatile biomaterial-based nanodevices for biomedical applications can be envisioned.
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