Spasenović, Marko

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Authority KeyName Variants
orcid::0000-0002-2173-0972
  • Spasenović, Marko (3)
Projects
FP7-NMP, project acronym nanoDNAsequencing [GA214840] European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Inovation Programme under Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant [642688]
Physics of Ordered Nanostructures and New Materials in Photonics Electronic, transport and optical properties of nanostructured materials
Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200017 (University of Belgrade, Institute of Nuclear Sciences 'Vinča', Belgrade-Vinča) Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200026 (University of Belgrade, Institute of Chemistry, Technology and Metallurgy - IChTM)
Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200053 (University of Belgrade, Institute for Multidisciplinary Research) An integral study to identify the regional genetic and environmental risk factors for the common noncommunicable diseases in the human population of Serbia - INGEMA_S
Nanostructured multifunctional materials and nanocomposites Innovation Fund through the Collaborative Grant Scheme
International Erasmus+ project [2015-2-ES01-KA107-022648] Qatar National Research Foundation [NPRP 7-665-1-125]
Spanish MINECO (project GRAFAGEN) [ENE2013-47904-C3] Spanish MINECOSpanish Government [RyC-2015-18968]
Swiss National Science Foundation (SCOPES project)Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) [152406] Swiss National Science Foundation (SCOPES Project)Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) [152406]

Author's Bibliography

Field Effect and Local Gating in Nitrogen-Terminated Nanopores (NtNP) and Nanogaps (NtNG) in Graphene

Djurišić, Ivana; Dražić, Miloš; Tomović, Aleksandar; Spasenović, Marko; Šljivančanin, Zeljko; Jovanović, Vladimir P.; Žikić, Radomir

(Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh, Weinheim, 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Djurišić, Ivana
AU  - Dražić, Miloš
AU  - Tomović, Aleksandar
AU  - Spasenović, Marko
AU  - Šljivančanin, Zeljko
AU  - Jovanović, Vladimir P.
AU  - Žikić, Radomir
PY  - 2021
UR  - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1405
AB  - Functionalization of electrodes is a wide-used strategy in various applications ranging from single-molecule sensing and protein sequencing, to ion trapping, to desalination. We demonstrate, employing non-equilibrium Green ' s function formalism combined with density functional theory, that single-species (N, H, S, Cl, F) termination of graphene nanogap electrodes results in a strong in-gap electrostatic field, induced by species-dependent dipoles formed at the electrode ends. Consequently, the field increases or decreases electronic transport through a molecule (benzene) placed in the nanogap by shifting molecular levels by almost 2 eV in respect to the electrode Fermi level via a field effect akin to the one used for field-effect transistors. We also observed the local gating in graphene nanopores terminated with different single-species atoms. Nitrogen-terminated nanogaps (NtNGs) and nanopores (NtNPs) show the strongest effect. The in-gap potential can be transformed from a plateau-like to a saddle-like shape by tailoring NtNG and NtNP size and termination type. In particular, the saddle-like potential is applicable in single-ion trapping and desalination devices.
PB  - Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh, Weinheim
T2  - Chemphyschem
T1  - Field Effect and Local Gating in Nitrogen-Terminated Nanopores (NtNP) and Nanogaps (NtNG) in Graphene
EP  - 341
IS  - 3
SP  - 336
VL  - 22
DO  - 10.1002/cphc.202000771
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Djurišić, Ivana and Dražić, Miloš and Tomović, Aleksandar and Spasenović, Marko and Šljivančanin, Zeljko and Jovanović, Vladimir P. and Žikić, Radomir",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Functionalization of electrodes is a wide-used strategy in various applications ranging from single-molecule sensing and protein sequencing, to ion trapping, to desalination. We demonstrate, employing non-equilibrium Green ' s function formalism combined with density functional theory, that single-species (N, H, S, Cl, F) termination of graphene nanogap electrodes results in a strong in-gap electrostatic field, induced by species-dependent dipoles formed at the electrode ends. Consequently, the field increases or decreases electronic transport through a molecule (benzene) placed in the nanogap by shifting molecular levels by almost 2 eV in respect to the electrode Fermi level via a field effect akin to the one used for field-effect transistors. We also observed the local gating in graphene nanopores terminated with different single-species atoms. Nitrogen-terminated nanogaps (NtNGs) and nanopores (NtNPs) show the strongest effect. The in-gap potential can be transformed from a plateau-like to a saddle-like shape by tailoring NtNG and NtNP size and termination type. In particular, the saddle-like potential is applicable in single-ion trapping and desalination devices.",
publisher = "Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh, Weinheim",
journal = "Chemphyschem",
title = "Field Effect and Local Gating in Nitrogen-Terminated Nanopores (NtNP) and Nanogaps (NtNG) in Graphene",
pages = "341-336",
number = "3",
volume = "22",
doi = "10.1002/cphc.202000771"
}
Djurišić, I., Dražić, M., Tomović, A., Spasenović, M., Šljivančanin, Z., Jovanović, V. P.,& Žikić, R.. (2021). Field Effect and Local Gating in Nitrogen-Terminated Nanopores (NtNP) and Nanogaps (NtNG) in Graphene. in Chemphyschem
Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh, Weinheim., 22(3), 336-341.
https://doi.org/10.1002/cphc.202000771
Djurišić I, Dražić M, Tomović A, Spasenović M, Šljivančanin Z, Jovanović VP, Žikić R. Field Effect and Local Gating in Nitrogen-Terminated Nanopores (NtNP) and Nanogaps (NtNG) in Graphene. in Chemphyschem. 2021;22(3):336-341.
doi:10.1002/cphc.202000771 .
Djurišić, Ivana, Dražić, Miloš, Tomović, Aleksandar, Spasenović, Marko, Šljivančanin, Zeljko, Jovanović, Vladimir P., Žikić, Radomir, "Field Effect and Local Gating in Nitrogen-Terminated Nanopores (NtNP) and Nanogaps (NtNG) in Graphene" in Chemphyschem, 22, no. 3 (2021):336-341,
https://doi.org/10.1002/cphc.202000771 . .
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DNA Sequencing with Single-Stranded DNA Rectification in a Nanogap Gated by N-Terminated Carbon Nanotube Electrodes

Djurišić, Ivana; Dražić, Miloš; Tomović, Aleksandar; Spasenović, Marko; Sljivancanin, Zeljko; Jovanović, Vladimir P.; Žikić, Radomir

(Amer Chemical Soc, Washington, 2020)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Djurišić, Ivana
AU  - Dražić, Miloš
AU  - Tomović, Aleksandar
AU  - Spasenović, Marko
AU  - Sljivancanin, Zeljko
AU  - Jovanović, Vladimir P.
AU  - Žikić, Radomir
PY  - 2020
UR  - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1346
AB  - Fast, reliable, and inexpensive DNA sequencing is an important pursuit in healthcare, especially in personalized medicine with possible deep societal impacts. Despite significant progress in various nanopore-based sequencing configurations, challenges that remain in resolution and chromosome-size-long readout call for new approaches. Here we found strong rectification in the transversal current during single-stranded DNA translocation through a nanopore with side-embedded N-terminated carbon nanotube electrodes. Employing density functional theory and nonequilibrium Green's function formalisms, we show that the rectifying ratio (response to square pulses of alternating bias) bears high nucleobase specificity. Rectification arises because of bias-dependent resistance asymmetry on the deoxyribonucleotide-electrode interfaces. The asymmetry induces molecular charging and highest occupied molecular orbital pinning to the electrochemical potential of one of the electrodes, assisted by an in-gap electric-field effect caused by dipoles at the terminated electrode ends. We propose the rectifying ratio, due to its order-of-magnitude-difference nucleobase selectivity and robustness to electrode-molecule orientation, as a promising readout quantifier for single-base resolution and chromosome-size-long single-read DNA sequencing. The proposed configurations are within experimental reach from the viewpoint of both nanofabrication and small current measurement.
PB  - Amer Chemical Soc, Washington
T2  - Acs Applied Nano Materials
T1  - DNA Sequencing with Single-Stranded DNA Rectification in a Nanogap Gated by N-Terminated Carbon Nanotube Electrodes
EP  - 3043
IS  - 3
SP  - 3034
VL  - 3
DO  - 10.1021/acsanm.0c00385
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Djurišić, Ivana and Dražić, Miloš and Tomović, Aleksandar and Spasenović, Marko and Sljivancanin, Zeljko and Jovanović, Vladimir P. and Žikić, Radomir",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Fast, reliable, and inexpensive DNA sequencing is an important pursuit in healthcare, especially in personalized medicine with possible deep societal impacts. Despite significant progress in various nanopore-based sequencing configurations, challenges that remain in resolution and chromosome-size-long readout call for new approaches. Here we found strong rectification in the transversal current during single-stranded DNA translocation through a nanopore with side-embedded N-terminated carbon nanotube electrodes. Employing density functional theory and nonequilibrium Green's function formalisms, we show that the rectifying ratio (response to square pulses of alternating bias) bears high nucleobase specificity. Rectification arises because of bias-dependent resistance asymmetry on the deoxyribonucleotide-electrode interfaces. The asymmetry induces molecular charging and highest occupied molecular orbital pinning to the electrochemical potential of one of the electrodes, assisted by an in-gap electric-field effect caused by dipoles at the terminated electrode ends. We propose the rectifying ratio, due to its order-of-magnitude-difference nucleobase selectivity and robustness to electrode-molecule orientation, as a promising readout quantifier for single-base resolution and chromosome-size-long single-read DNA sequencing. The proposed configurations are within experimental reach from the viewpoint of both nanofabrication and small current measurement.",
publisher = "Amer Chemical Soc, Washington",
journal = "Acs Applied Nano Materials",
title = "DNA Sequencing with Single-Stranded DNA Rectification in a Nanogap Gated by N-Terminated Carbon Nanotube Electrodes",
pages = "3043-3034",
number = "3",
volume = "3",
doi = "10.1021/acsanm.0c00385"
}
Djurišić, I., Dražić, M., Tomović, A., Spasenović, M., Sljivancanin, Z., Jovanović, V. P.,& Žikić, R.. (2020). DNA Sequencing with Single-Stranded DNA Rectification in a Nanogap Gated by N-Terminated Carbon Nanotube Electrodes. in Acs Applied Nano Materials
Amer Chemical Soc, Washington., 3(3), 3034-3043.
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.0c00385
Djurišić I, Dražić M, Tomović A, Spasenović M, Sljivancanin Z, Jovanović VP, Žikić R. DNA Sequencing with Single-Stranded DNA Rectification in a Nanogap Gated by N-Terminated Carbon Nanotube Electrodes. in Acs Applied Nano Materials. 2020;3(3):3034-3043.
doi:10.1021/acsanm.0c00385 .
Djurišić, Ivana, Dražić, Miloš, Tomović, Aleksandar, Spasenović, Marko, Sljivancanin, Zeljko, Jovanović, Vladimir P., Žikić, Radomir, "DNA Sequencing with Single-Stranded DNA Rectification in a Nanogap Gated by N-Terminated Carbon Nanotube Electrodes" in Acs Applied Nano Materials, 3, no. 3 (2020):3034-3043,
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.0c00385 . .
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Reducing sheet resistance of self-assembled transparent graphene films by defect patching and doping with UV/ozone treatment

Tomasevic-Ilic, Tijana; Jovanović, Đorđe; Popov, Igor; Fandan, Rajveer; Pedros, Jorge; Spasenović, Marko; Gajic, Rados

(Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2018)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Tomasevic-Ilic, Tijana
AU  - Jovanović, Đorđe
AU  - Popov, Igor
AU  - Fandan, Rajveer
AU  - Pedros, Jorge
AU  - Spasenović, Marko
AU  - Gajic, Rados
PY  - 2018
UR  - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1113
AB  - Liquid phase exfoliation followed by Langmuir-Blodgett self-assembly (LBSA) is a promising method for scalable production of thin graphene films for transparent conductor applications. However, monolayer assembly into thin films often induces a high density of defects, resulting in a large sheet resistance that hinders practical use. We introduce UV/ozone as a novel photochemical treatment that reduces sheet resistance of LBSA graphene threefold, while preserving the high optical transparency. The effect of such treatment on our films is opposite to the effect it has on mechanically exfoliated or CVD films, where UV/ozone creates additional defects in the graphene plane, increasing sheet resistance. Raman scattering shows that exposure to UV/ozone reduces the defect density in LBSA graphene, where edges are the dominant defect type. FTIR spectroscopy indicates binding of oxygen to the graphene lattice during exposure to ozone. In addition, work function measurements reveal that the treatment dopes the LBSA film, making it more conductive. Such defect patching paired with doping leads to an accessible way of improving the transparent conductor performance of LBSA graphene, making solutionprocessed thin films a candidate for industrial use.
PB  - Elsevier, Amsterdam
T2  - Applied Surface Science
T1  - Reducing sheet resistance of self-assembled transparent graphene films by defect patching and doping with UV/ozone treatment
EP  - 453
SP  - 446
VL  - 458
DO  - 10.1016/j.apsusc.2018.07.111
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Tomasevic-Ilic, Tijana and Jovanović, Đorđe and Popov, Igor and Fandan, Rajveer and Pedros, Jorge and Spasenović, Marko and Gajic, Rados",
year = "2018",
abstract = "Liquid phase exfoliation followed by Langmuir-Blodgett self-assembly (LBSA) is a promising method for scalable production of thin graphene films for transparent conductor applications. However, monolayer assembly into thin films often induces a high density of defects, resulting in a large sheet resistance that hinders practical use. We introduce UV/ozone as a novel photochemical treatment that reduces sheet resistance of LBSA graphene threefold, while preserving the high optical transparency. The effect of such treatment on our films is opposite to the effect it has on mechanically exfoliated or CVD films, where UV/ozone creates additional defects in the graphene plane, increasing sheet resistance. Raman scattering shows that exposure to UV/ozone reduces the defect density in LBSA graphene, where edges are the dominant defect type. FTIR spectroscopy indicates binding of oxygen to the graphene lattice during exposure to ozone. In addition, work function measurements reveal that the treatment dopes the LBSA film, making it more conductive. Such defect patching paired with doping leads to an accessible way of improving the transparent conductor performance of LBSA graphene, making solutionprocessed thin films a candidate for industrial use.",
publisher = "Elsevier, Amsterdam",
journal = "Applied Surface Science",
title = "Reducing sheet resistance of self-assembled transparent graphene films by defect patching and doping with UV/ozone treatment",
pages = "453-446",
volume = "458",
doi = "10.1016/j.apsusc.2018.07.111"
}
Tomasevic-Ilic, T., Jovanović, Đ., Popov, I., Fandan, R., Pedros, J., Spasenović, M.,& Gajic, R.. (2018). Reducing sheet resistance of self-assembled transparent graphene films by defect patching and doping with UV/ozone treatment. in Applied Surface Science
Elsevier, Amsterdam., 458, 446-453.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2018.07.111
Tomasevic-Ilic T, Jovanović Đ, Popov I, Fandan R, Pedros J, Spasenović M, Gajic R. Reducing sheet resistance of self-assembled transparent graphene films by defect patching and doping with UV/ozone treatment. in Applied Surface Science. 2018;458:446-453.
doi:10.1016/j.apsusc.2018.07.111 .
Tomasevic-Ilic, Tijana, Jovanović, Đorđe, Popov, Igor, Fandan, Rajveer, Pedros, Jorge, Spasenović, Marko, Gajic, Rados, "Reducing sheet resistance of self-assembled transparent graphene films by defect patching and doping with UV/ozone treatment" in Applied Surface Science, 458 (2018):446-453,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2018.07.111 . .
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