| Literature DB >> 25189574 |
Guangyu Xu1, Jeffrey Abbott1, Ling Qin2, Kitty Y M Yeung2, Yi Song3, Hosang Yoon2, Jing Kong3, Donhee Ham2.
Abstract
Field-effect transistor biomolecular sensors based on low-dimensional nanomaterials boast sensitivity, label-free operation and chip-scale construction. Chemical vapour deposition graphene is especially well suited for multiplexed electronic DNA array applications, since its large two-dimensional morphology readily lends itself to top-down fabrication of transistor arrays. Nonetheless, graphene field-effect transistor DNA sensors have been studied mainly at single-device level. Here we create, from chemical vapour deposition graphene, field-effect transistor arrays with two features representing steps towards multiplexed DNA arrays. First, a robust array yield--seven out of eight transistors--is achieved with a 100-fM sensitivity, on par with optical DNA microarrays and at least 10 times higher than prior chemical vapour deposition graphene transistor DNA sensors. Second, each graphene acts as an electrophoretic electrode for site-specific probe DNA immobilization, and performs subsequent site-specific detection of target DNA as a field-effect transistor. The use of graphene as both electrode and transistor suggests a path towards all-electrical multiplexed graphene DNA arrays.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25189574 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5866
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919