We studied the electrical conductivity of DNA molecules with conducting atomic
force microscopy as a function of the chemical nature of the substrate surfaces,
the nature of the electrical contact, and the number of DNA molecules (from a few
molecules, to ropes and large fibers containing up to ~ 106 molecules).
Independent of the chemical nature of the surface (hydrophobic or hydrophilic,
electrically neutral or charged), we find that DNA is highly resistive. From a large
number of current-voltage curves measured at several distance along the DNA, we
estimate a conductivity of about 10-6-10-5 S·cm-1 per DNA molecule. For single
DNA molecules, this highly resistive behavior is correlated with its flattened
conformation on the surface (reduced thickness, ~0.5-1.5 nm, compared to its
nominal value, ~2.4 nm). We find that intercalating an organic semiconductor
buffer film between the DNA and the metal electrode improves the reliability of
the contact, while direct metal evaporation usually destroys the DNA and prevents
any current measurements. After long exposure under vacuum or dry nitrogen, the
conductivity strongly decreases, leading to the conclusion that water molecules
and ions in the hydration shell of the DNA play a major role.
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