Abstract

Strongly confined environments (confined dimensions between 1-100 nm) represent unique challenges and opportunities for understanding and manipulating molecular behavior due to the significant effects of electric double layers, high surface-area to volume ratios, and other phenomena at the nanoscale. Convex Lens-induced Confinement (CLiC) can be used to analyze the dynamics of individual molecules or particles confined in a planar slit geometry with continuously varying gap thickness. We describe an interferometry-based method for precise measurement of the slit pore geometry. Specifically, this approach permitted accurate characterization of separation distances as small as 5 nm, with 1 nm precision, without a priori knowledge or assumptions about the contact geometry, as well as a greatly simplified experimental setup that required only a lens, coverslip, and inverted microscope. The interferometry-based measurement of gap height offered a distinct advantage over conventional fluorescent dye-based methods; e.g., accurate interferometric height measurements were made at low gap heights regardless of solution conditions, while the concentration of fluorescent dye was significantly impacted by solution conditions such as ionic strength or pH. The accuracy of the interferometric measurements was demonstrated by comparing the experimentally measured concentration of a charged fluorescent dye as a function of gap thickness with dye concentration profiles calculated using Debye-Hückel theory. Accurate characterization of nanoscale gap thickness will enable researchers to study a variety of practical and biologically relevant systems within the CLiC geometry.

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