Hydrogen terminated nanocrystalline Diamond (H-NCD) is a promising candidate for bio-electronic devices because it shows high biocompatibility and high stability in air and in aqueous environment, its surface conductivity may be thinly controlled and it exhibits the highest grafting stability [1]. Generally, bio-molecules are immobilized on the diamond surface through small cross-linkers which covalently bond those molecules to the inorganic diamond substrate. Among the cross-linkers, the amino groups are the more favourable. Thermal, chemical, photochemical and electrochemical surface modification are used to graft the amino-groups on diamond surface[2]. This modification usually involves two or more steps with potential increase of surface contamination. For this reason, one-step amination of H-NCD surface using UV irradiation in an ammonia gas was recently proposed [3]. In this work we present an XPS in situ investigation of the one-step amination with the aim to better understand the chemistry behind the grafting and in particular the role of oxygen.

XPS and UPS investigation of the diamond surface oxidation by UV irradiation

M Ferrari;A Chiasera;
2008

Abstract

Hydrogen terminated nanocrystalline Diamond (H-NCD) is a promising candidate for bio-electronic devices because it shows high biocompatibility and high stability in air and in aqueous environment, its surface conductivity may be thinly controlled and it exhibits the highest grafting stability [1]. Generally, bio-molecules are immobilized on the diamond surface through small cross-linkers which covalently bond those molecules to the inorganic diamond substrate. Among the cross-linkers, the amino groups are the more favourable. Thermal, chemical, photochemical and electrochemical surface modification are used to graft the amino-groups on diamond surface[2]. This modification usually involves two or more steps with potential increase of surface contamination. For this reason, one-step amination of H-NCD surface using UV irradiation in an ammonia gas was recently proposed [3]. In this work we present an XPS in situ investigation of the one-step amination with the aim to better understand the chemistry behind the grafting and in particular the role of oxygen.
2008
Istituto di fotonica e nanotecnologie - IFN
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/17246
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