Systems and Methods for Producing Carbon Solids
US-2024417566-A1 · Dec 19, 2024 · US
US9702849B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9702849-B2 |
| Application number | US-201114009348-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Apr 29, 2011 |
| Priority date | Apr 4, 2011 |
| Publication date | Jul 11, 2017 |
| Grant date | Jul 11, 2017 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
There is provided a nanopore disposed in a support structure, with a fluidic connection between a first fluidic reservoir and an inlet to the nanopore and a second fluidic connection between a second fluidic reservoir and an outlet from the nanopore. A first ionic solution of a first buffer concentration is disposed in the first reservoir and a second ionic solution of a second buffer concentration, different than the first concentration, is disposed in the second reservoir, with the nanopore providing the sole path of fluidic communication between the first and second reservoirs. An electrical connection is disposed at a location in the nanopore sensor that develops an electrical signal indicative of electrical potential local to at least one site in the nanopore sensor as an object translocates through the nanopore between the two reservoirs.
Opening claim text (preview).
We claim: 1. A nanopore sensor comprising: a nanopore disposed in a support structure; a fluidic connection between a first fluidic reservoir and an inlet to the nanopore, with a first ionic solution of a first ionic concentration disposed in the first reservoir; a fluidic connection between a second fluidic reservoir and an outlet from the nanopore, with a second ionic solution of a second ionic concentration, different than the first ionic concentration, disposed in the second reservoir, the nanopore providing the sole path of fluidic communication between the first and second reservoirs; an electrical transduction element disposed in contact with that ionic solution, of the first and second ionic solutions, which has a lower ionic concentration, the transduction element being arranged at a site that produces in the transduction element an electrical signal indicative of electrical potential local to that ionic solution having a lower ionic concentration; and an electrical circuit connected to the transduction element and including a circuit element that produces an electrical signal indicative of changes in the electrical potential local to that ionic solution having a lower ionic concentration. 2. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction element is disposed at one of the inlet to the nanopore and the outlet from the nanopore to indicate local electrical potential at one of the inlet to the nanopore and the outlet from the nanopore. 3. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction element comprises a plurality of electrical transduction elements, one transduction element disposed in the first ionic solution and one transduction element disclosed in the second ionic solution, to indicate a difference in electrical potential local to the first ionic solution and electrical potential local to the second ionic solution, between the inlet to the nanopore and the outlet from the nanopore. 4. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the nanopore has an electrical fluidic solution resistance and the reservoir of lower ionic concentration has an ionic concentration that provides in the reservoir of lower concentration an electrical reservoir access resistance that is of the same order of magnitude as the nanopore fluidic solution resistance and that is at least an order of magnitude greater than a reservoir access resistance of the reservoir of higher ionic concentration. 5. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein one of the fluidic solution ionic concentrations is at least about 20 times greater than the other of the fluidic solution ionic concentrations. 6. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein one of the fluidic solution ionic concentrations is at least about 50 times greater than the other of the fluidic solution ionic concentrations. 7. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein one of the fluidic solution ionic concentrations is at least about 100 times greater than the other of the fluidic solution ionic concentrations. 8. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein a difference between the fluidic solution ionic concentration of the first fluidic reservoir and the fluidic solution ionic concentration of the second fluidic reservoir is sufficient to produce a local electrical potential signal decay length, measured from one of the inlet to the nanopore and the outlet from the nanopore, that is at least about 5 nm. 9. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein a difference between the fluidic solution ionic concentration of the first fluidic reservoir and the fluidic solution ionic concentration of the second fluidic reservoir is sufficient for the electrical transduction element to produce a local electrical potential signal that is characterized by a bandwidth of at least about 50 MHz. 10. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the nanopore is characterized by a diameter that is between about 1 nm and about 5 nm. 11. The graphene nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the nanopore is characterized by a diameter that is between about 1 nm and about 2 nm. 12. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction element is disposed on the nanopore support structure at one of the inlet to the nanopore and the outlet from the nanopore. 13. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction element comprises an electrical device or device region. 14. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction element comprises an electrical circuit. 15. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction element comprises a transistor. 16. The nanopore sensor of claim 15 wherein the electrical transduction element comprises a field effect transistor. 17. The nanopore sensor of claim 16 wherein the electrical transduction element comprises a nanowire field effect transistor. 18. The nanopore sensor of claim 17 wherein the nanowire comprises a silicon nanowire. 19. The nanopore sensor of claim 16 wherein the field effect transistor includes an electronic conduction channel that is disposed at the nanopore. 20. The nanopore sensor of claim 15 wherein the electrical transduction element comprises a single electron transistor. 21. The nanopore sensor of claim 20 wherein the transistor is disposed on the nanopore support structure. 22. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the support structure in which the nanopore is disposed comprises a membrane. 23. The nanopore sensor of claim 22 wherein the electrical transduction element comprises a nanowire disposed on the membrane at a location of one of the inlet to the nanopore and the outlet from the nanopore. 24. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the support structure in which the nanopore is disposed comprises a suspended layer of graphene. 25. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction element comprises a graphene layer in which the nanopore is disposed. 26. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the support structure in which the nanopore is disposed comprises a solid state material. 27. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the support structure in which the nanopore is disposed comprises a biological material. 28. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 further comprising an electrical connection, between the first ionic solution and the second ionic solution, that applies a voltage bias between the inlet to the nanopore and the outlet from the nanopore to electrophoretically drive objects through the nanopore. 29. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction element is arranged at a site that produces an electrical signal indicative of electrical potential local to that ionic solution having a lower ionic concentration in response to a molecule translocating through the nanopore. 30. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction element is arranged at a site that produces an electrical signal indicative of electrical potential local to that ionic solution having a lower ionic concentration in response to translocation through the nanopore of at least one object selected from the group consisting of DNA, DNA fragments, RNA, RNA fragments, nucleotides, nucleosides, oligonucleotides, proteins, polypeptides, and amino acids. 31. The nanopore sensor of claim 1 wherein the electrical transduction e
Nanotechnology for materials or surface science, e.g. nanocomposites · CPC title
Methods for sequencing · CPC title
Investigating individual macromolecules, e.g. by translocation through nanopores (Coulter counters in general G01N15/12; fabrication methods for nanoscale apertures B81B1/00; sequencing of nucleic acids C12Q1/68) · CPC title
using electrophoresis · CPC title
Nanotechnology for interacting, sensing or actuating, e.g. quantum dots as markers in protein assays or molecular motors · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.