20.109(F08): Mod 3 Day 4 Phage by design

Introduction
Today you’ll peel away portions of a slide’s surface coat so that next time you can add phage nanowires to the places where the coat remains. The slide’s coats are ITO (“indium tin oxide”), which is a transparent conductive material. Eventually, the ITO will serve as the electrodes of our phage-based electrochromic device. A preview the device architecture is shown below.

Part 1: Pattern for phage deposition
There are two dangerous parts in today's lab. You will be working with an Exact-O knife to carefully cut a pattern onto your slide. These knives are  extremely sharp  and everyone should show the greatest care in handling these or you will end up at MIT medical. The second danger is the concentrated acid treatment  needed to pattern the slides. You must, must, must wear lab coat, closed-toed shoes, gloves (perhaps double gloves), and goggles when you are dealing with the HCl, HNO3 solution. In today's lab it will be the teaching faculty who suit up to do this. 14. Remove the tape from the surface. If there are bits of glue left on the slide, you can clean them off with a cotton-tipped applicator that you dip in methanol. You must remove all glue and tape from the slide before depositing the nanowires. 15. Store your etched slide in a falcon tube in your team drawer until next time.
 * 1) Collect an ITO slide from the teaching faculty, touching the slide with a gloved hand and only on the edges. [[Image:Macintosh HD-Users-nkuldell-Desktop-20.109(F07)-20.109(F07) Mod3 ECD-Mod3F07 wiki images-multimeter.jpg|thumb|right|multimeter set to measure current rather than resistance as you should be doing]] ITO stands for "indium tin oxide" and it will serve as a transparent electrode in our electrochromic devices.
 * 2) It will not be obvious which side of the slide has ITO so you will have to measure the conductance of each surface. To do this, you should put a Chemwipe down on your bench and rest the slide on it. Use the multimeter to measure the conductance of both surfaces. Hold the probes a set distance from one another and measure resistance (in ohms). If the material that you are touching is unable to conduct a current, the resistance will read "0L."  The side of the slide with ITO should give a numerical reading, depending on how far apart the probes are held.
 * 3) Clean the ITO slide by placing it into a 50 ml falcon tube with 1% Liquinox.  Sonicate for 2 minutes.  Remove the slide from the Liquinox solution with gloves or with tweezers and briefly rinse in distilled H2O.  Place the slide in a 50 mL Falcon tube with methanol.  Sonicate for 2 minutes.  Remove the slide and then let it air-dry on a paper towel on the bench. Do not wipe the ITO surface. Save the tubes of Liquinox and methanol for the end of lab.
 * 4) While the slide is drying, decide on your ECD design. What you choose should fit into a 1 inch by 1 inch box, as shown in the figure that is on the "talk" page of today's lab.    As you think about what image to choose note that the area of your image that you want dark (i.e. visible) should remain under tape and you will cut out the areas that you want clear. Also note that current must be able to flow across to the image when we finally hook it up, so make sure that you leave your image connected to the rest of the ITO, unlike the "MIT" example shown in today's protocols. Print out three copies of your image: one for the slide and one for each of your notebooks.
 * 5) When your slide is dry, place it ITO side up onto the bench and fully cover it with a strip of red 3M tape. Press the air-bubbles out.[[Image:Macintosh_HD-Users-nkuldell-Desktop-redtape.jpg|thumb|left]][[Image:Macintosh_HD-Users-nkuldell-Desktop-tapedpattern.jpg|thumb|right]]
 * 6) Cover the end that you'll pattern with double-sided scotch tape and then tape your printed image to the slide.
 * 7) Cut the pattern you've chosen, running the knife-blade back and forth a few times on each cut to insure that all the tapes have been cut.
 * 8) Peel off the paper, scotch-tape and red tape to expose the areas of the slide where the ITO is to be removed (i.e. where no phage will bind, i.e. where no color will form). The silver tweezers in your drawer should be useful for this step. Use the Exact-O knife as needed also.
 * 9) One of the teaching faculty will place your slide, pattern down, into the acid wash solution that is gently mixing on a stir plate in the hood. Balance your slide on the edge of the beaker, so the red tape remains outside the acidic solution. It should be possible to balance 3 or 4 slides in each beaker. [[Image:Macintosh_HD-Users-nkuldell-Desktop-cutpattern.jpg|thumb|left]][[Image:Macintosh_HD-Users-nkuldell-Desktop-removingITO.jpg|thumb|right]]
 * 10) Incubate the slide in the acid solution for 20 minutes.
 * 11) Wash the slide by swirling it three times in the 1L beaker of H2O that is in the hood. Be very careful not to drip any of the acid wash solution as you move the slide.
 * 12) Clean the slide by placing it back in the falcon tube with MeOH, then allow the slide to air dry on a paper towel on the bench.
 * 13) Before fully removing the tape that remains on the slide, verify that the ITO has been removed from the exposed regions. Peel back a small corner of the red tape that remained outside the acid solution. Use the multimeter to compare the conduction when the probes are

for those working on the research proposal
You should be on your way to becoming an expert on your research topic. You should have been reading and thinking a lot about it and you may feel (a) like there's too much to read (b) like you have too many ideas and no way to map or prioritize them (c) like you don't understand what you're reading (d) all of the above.

One of the best ways to help frame the problem for yourself is to discuss it with someone new. While your slides are in the acid bath, you will have time to talk with another lab group. That group will offer you a fresh ear to consider your proposal. Try to describe your research problem to them. Articulate why it's important. Tell them about some recent, relevant data. Describe what you're proposing to do and what the findings from your experiments might reveal. Throughout your discussion, keep careful track of the questions they ask since these will point you to the confusing concepts or fuzzy parts of your explanation or understanding.

Then be a good listener to hear the proposal that they've been working on. Ask lots of questions. No questions are dumb. You are there to offer a naive ear and seek complete explanations. You will have time at the very end of class to reconvene with your own lab partner to hear how their conversation went. Try to identify repeated questions or concerns since these are probably the holes in the project as it stands. You can rework your proposal based on the conversations you've had.

for those working on the exhibit
The work for today will very much depend on the outcome of the meeting with the Grafting Parlour artists. Stay tuned!

DONE!

For next time
Outline your research proposal/exhibit presentation. If you are working on a research proposal recall that you will need to present Suggested numbers of slides are listed here but the number may vary depending on the particulars of your proposal. You will have time to work on the presentation in lab next time as well as ask questions about the format, but you should begin to prepare, in powerpoint or similar presentation program, the materials you need.
 * a brief project overview (1 slide)
 * sufficient background information for everyone to understand your proposal (1-3 slides)
 * a statement of the research problem and goals (1 slide)
 * project details and methods (3-5 slides)
 * predicted outcomes if everything goes according to plan and if nothing does (3-5 slides)
 * needed resources to complete the work (1 slide)
 * societal impact if all goes well (1 slide)

OR
If you are working on an exhibit, recall that you will need to present You will have time to work on the presentation in lab next time as well as ask questions about the format, but you should begin to prepare, in powerpoint or similar presentation program, the materials you need.
 * a description of existing ways the public can interact with science (and/or) how a new model for an interactive laboratory can fit into the history of science and knowledge (and/or) your ideas about citizenship and biological engineering
 * a statement of the exhibit's goal(s) and a summary of your planned exhibit, assuming your work is fully successful
 * a detailed plan for the exhibit, including (1) a high level "system summary" or "timing diagram", and (2) a list of "parts" or "devices," i.e. a list of DNA functions, that you'll need to find/clone/synthesize
 * a detailed plan for the laboratory, including (1) first experimental steps that will be needed and (2) a measurement or control experiment you'll perform to assess how well your exhibit is working. You must include hypothetical data for the measurement or control, explicitly describing what values or outcome you'd expect a working and a non-working system.
 * needed resources to complete the work
 * societal impact if all goes well

Reagents list
Acid wash solution ("aqua regia")

Beaker for acid solution: VWR 100x50 Cat No: 89000-290

100 mL H2O

85 mL HCl

30 mL HNO3