Thermal Desorption Behavior and Binding Properties of DNA Bases and Nucleosides on Gold
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2002 papers
Abstract
A comparison of the binding of DNA bases (adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine) and nucleosides (2'deoxyadenosine, 2'deoxycytidine, 2'deoxyguanosine, and thymidine) to gold thin films is presented. Desorption of monolayer/submonolayer and multilayer films of the adsorbates on gold studied via temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and reflection-absorption infrared (RAIR) spectroscopy reveals that there are major differences in the binding affinities of the different bases to gold, for example, thymine DeltaHdes = 111 +/- 2 kJ/mol compared to guanine DeltaHdes = 146 +/- 2 kJ/mol. The differences can be rationalized by molecular structures of the bases and their binding modes to gold surfaces deduced from IR data. Similar trends in desorption energies, shifted to lower desorption energy by more than 10 kJ/mol, are observed for deoxynucleoside layers on gold thin films.
Related Papers
- → Thermal desorption of surface phosphorus on Si(100) surfaces(1999)17 cited
- → Thermal desorption of Li from Si(111)(2003)4 cited
- → Thermal desorption of interacting molecules from heterogeneous surfaces; Application to co desorption from MgO(1987)65 cited
- → The Thermal Desorption Spectra Study of Hydrogen Chemisorption on Si(100) Clean Surface(1985)
- → Thermal desorption of interacting molecules from heterogeneous surfaces; application to CO desorption from MgO(1987)