| Literature DB >> 25114659 |
Mohammad Javad Kiani1, Fauzan Khairi Che Harun2, Mohammad Taghi Ahmadi3, Meisam Rahmani2, Mahdi Saeidmanesh2, Moslem Zare4.
Abstract
Graphene is an attention-grabbing material in electronics, physics, chemistry, and even biology because of its unique properties such as high surface-area-to-volume ratio. Also, the ability of graphene-based materials to continuously tune charge carriers from holes to electrons makes them promising for biological applications, especially in lipid bilayer-based sensors. Furthermore, changes in charged lipid membrane properties can be electrically detected by a graphene-based electrolyte-gated graphene field effect transistor (GFET). In this paper, a monolayer graphene-based GFET with a focus on the conductance variation caused by membrane electric charges and thickness is studied. Monolayer graphene conductance as an electrical detection platform is suggested for neutral, negative, and positive electric-charged membrane. The electric charge and thickness of the lipid bilayer (Q LP and L LP) as a function of carrier density are proposed, and the control parameters are defined. Finally, the proposed analytical model is compared with experimental data which indicates good overall agreement.Entities:
Keywords: Conductance modulation; Electric charge; Lipid bilayer; Monolayer graphene
Year: 2014 PMID: 25114659 PMCID: PMC4125348 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-9-371
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1Monolayer graphene structure with one-atom thickness.
Figure 2Structure of phospholipid bilayer.
Figure 3Comparison between bipolar transfer curve of conductance model (blue line) and experimental extracted data (red line) for neutral membrane.
Figure 4Comparison between GFET-conductance model and extracted experimental data[10]. For graphene coated with negatively charged, positively charged and neutral POPC membranes.
Figure 5Schematics of the structure and the electrical circuit of the electrolyte-gated graphene-FET for charged lipid bilayer detection[10].
Figure 6Schematic of lipid bilayer-adsorption processes by surface area of single-layer graphene.
Figure 7Comparison between graphene conductance model and extracted experimental data[10]. (a) For negatively electric charges. (b) For positively electric charges.
Figure 8Extracted experimental data for membrane thickness effect and -characteristic of proposed conductance model. (a) Extracted experimental data for membrane thickness effect of biomimetic membrane-coated graphene biosensor. (b)G-Vg characteristic of proposed conductance model with experimental data [10] for 10-μM membrane thickness.
Different and values with changes
| QLP | |
| Neutral | 0.11 |
| Negatively | 0.29 |
| Positively | -1.1 |
| LLP | |
| 10 nm | 0.24 |
| 0.1 μm | 0.135 |
| 1 μm | 0.09 |
| 10 μm | 0.045 |