Self-assembly: the natural way to make things

June 29/July 6, 2005
Causing technological materials and devices to assemble automatically is a matter of bending natural processes and materials to specific ends. Three and a half billion years of evolution have produced many useful materials and processes, and several of these are particularly suited to technology.

Nature’s building block is the molecule, that collection of atoms that gives a material or substance its properties. And the molecule that serves as the blueprint for all of life’s processes is deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).

Life's plan

Biological DNA is made up of long strings of four types of bases - adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine - attached to a sugar-phosphate backbone. Adenine pairs up with thymine and cytosine with guanine when two single strands of DNA mesh to form the familiar double helix.

DNA makes the proteins that carry out life’s processes by exposing a portion of a single strand as a template; the requisite protein can assemble automatically simply by matching up base pairs. In a cell, this happens in a more complicated two-step process. DNA provides a template for ribonucleic acid (RNA), which then acts as a template for proteins outside the cell’s nucleus.

DNA’s replication process is a similar self-assembly process. When the strands separate, each single single strand becomes a template for new pairs.

Researchers can make artificial strands of DNA that have specific sequences of base pairs designed so that the strands combine to form structures or produce specific proteins.

Connecting things up

Most of life’s processes are carried out by protein molecules that fold into various shapes. Proteins recognize and connect to other molecules based on shapes, similar to a key fitting into a lock.

Once two molecules come together in a lock and key formation, there are several ways the two molecules can bond to each other without going so far as chemically fusing. The two that show promise for technological self-assembly are electrostatic interactions and hydrophobic interactions.

Ectrostatic interactions occur when the positive electrical charge of one atom’s nucleus attracts the negative charge of another’s electrons. Once the molecules get close enough, this charge draws the two together and holds them at the point where the two atoms’ electrons begin to repel each other.

Hydrophobic interactions occur when molecules that are electrically balanced, or nonpolar, are repelled by polar molecules, notably water. The electric charges in polar molecules are asymmetrical. Polar molecules attract each other, which has the effect of rounding up any interspersed nonpolar molecules.

Building a bigger molecule

One way to make large molecules is to use smaller molecules as building blocks. Polymerization, or the process of forming large molecules, polymers, from small molecules, or monomers, occurs throughout nature.

There are two basic types of polymerization reactions: chain reactions, and step reactions.

Step reactions, also known as condensation polymerization, are relatively slow and result in relatively simple polymers. This process forms natural polymers like silk and artificial polymers like many household plastics, but it’s slow pace makes it less useful than chain reactions for self-assembly.

Chain reactions

In contrast, chain reaction polymerization is very fast. It also often results in branched molecules and cross-linking between polymer strands, which are useful for shaping nanostructures and mating polymers with nanoparticles or other molecules.

Chain reaction polymerization forms polymers from small molecules that contain two carbon atoms with two shared pairs of electrons. If one of the bonds between the two carbon atoms is broken, the molecule becomes a free radical, which is very reactive. When two free radicals meet, their unpaired electrons form a new covalent bond, creating a single, larger molecule. Hundreds or thousands of molecules can link this way to form long polymers.

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