posted on 2004-10-12, 00:00authored byDeclan Ryan, Babak Amir Parviz, Vincent Linder, Vincent Semetey, Samuel K. Sia, Jing Su, Milan Mrksich, George M. Whitesides
This work describes a method for patterning a gold substrate with multiple, aligned self-assembled
monolayers (SAMs) using light at different wavelengths. It describes the synthesis and characterization
of an alkanethiolate SAM that is photosensitive to light at both 220 and 365 nm. A photomask acts as an
area-selective filter for light at 220 and 365 nm, and a single set of exposures at these two wavelengths
through one photomask, without steps of alignment between the exposures, can produce three aligned
SAMs on one gold substrate. We demonstrate the versatility of this method of photopatterning by modifying
individual aligned SAMs chemically to produce surfaces having different properties. We characterize the
modified SAMs using immunolabeling, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass
spectroscopy, and surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. We also describe the patterning of two aligned
SAMs that resist the adsorption of proteins and a third region that does not resist the adsorption of
proteins. The ability to produce multiple, aligned patterns of SAMs in a single step, without alignment
of photomasks in separate steps, increases the versatility of SAMs for studying a range of physical phenomena.