posted on 2022-01-14, 13:03authored byBintian Zhang, Eathen Ryan, Xu Wang, Weisi Song, Stuart Lindsay
DNA
molecular wires have been studied extensively because of the
ease with which molecules of controlled length and composition can
be synthesized. The same has not been true for proteins. Here, we
have synthesized and studied a series of consensus tetratricopeptide
repeat (CTPR) proteins, spanning 4 to 20 nm in length, in increments
of 4 nm. For lengths in excess of 6 nm, their conductance exceeds
that of the canonical molecular wire, oligo(phenylene-ethylenene),
because of the more gradual decay of conductance with length in the
protein. We show that, while the conductance decay fits an exponential
(characteristic of quantum tunneling) and not a linear increase of
resistance with length (characteristic of hopping transport), it is
also accounted for by a square-law dependence on length (characteristic
of weakly driven hopping). Measurements of the energy dependence of
the decay length rule out the quantum tunneling case. A resonance
in the carrier injection energy shows that allowed states in the protein
align with the Fermi energy of the electrodes. Both the energy of
these states and the long-range of hopping suggest that the reorganization
induced by hole formation is greatly reduced inside the protein. We
outline a model for calculating the molecular-electronic properties
of proteins.