Hexagonal Boron Nitride Spacers for Fluorescence Imaging of Biomolecules

Xiliang Yang, Dong Hoon Shin, Ze Yu, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, Vitaliy Babenko, Stephan Hofmann, Sabina Caneva*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

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Abstract

Fluorescence imaging is an invaluable tool to investigate biomolecular dynamics, mechanics, and interactions in aqueous environments. Two-dimensional materials offer large-area, atomically smooth surfaces for wide-field biomolecule imaging. Despite the success of graphene for on-chip biosensing and biomolecule manipulation, its strong fluorescence-quenching properties pose a challenge for biomolecular investigations that are based on direct optical readouts. Here, we employ few-layer hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) as a precisely tailorable fluorescence spacer between labelled lipid membranes and graphene substrates. By stacking high-quality hBN crystals in the 10–20 nm thickness range on monolayer graphene, we observe distance-dependent fluorescence intensity variations. Remarkably, with hBN spacers as thin as 20 nm, the fluorescence intensity is comparable to bare SiO2/Si substrates, while the intensity was reduced to 60 % and 80 % with ~10 nm and ~16 nm hBN thicknesses respectively. We confirm that pre-determined hBN thicknesses can be employed to control the non-radiative energy transfer properties of graphene, with fluorescence quenching following a d−4 distance-dependent behaviour. This seamless integration of electronically active and dielectric van der Waals materials into vertical heterostructures enables multifunctional platforms addressing the manipulation, localization, and visualization of biomolecules for fundamental biophysics and biosensing applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202300592
Number of pages6
JournalChemNanoMat
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

D.H.S. and S.C. acknowledge funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (ERC StG, SIMPHONICS, Project No. 101041486). S.C. acknowledges a Delft Technology Fellowship. X.Y. acknowledges funding from the Chinese Scholarship Council (Scholarship No. 202108270002). Z.Y. acknowledges funding from NWO (Project MechanoPore).

Keywords

  • fluorescence
  • graphene
  • hexagonal boron nitride (hBN)
  • lipids
  • quenching

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