| Literature DB >> 25852375 |
Ioannis Zeimpekis1, Kai Sun1, Chunxiao Hu1, Owain Thomas2, Maurits Rr de Planque1, Harold Mh Chong1, Hywel Morgan1, Peter Ashburn1.
Abstract
In this work, we investigate sensor design approaches for eliminating the effects of parasitic resistance in nanowire and nanoribbon biosensors. Measurements of pH with polysilicon nanoribbon biosensors are used to demonstrate a reduction in sensitivity as the sensor length is reduced. The sensitivity (normalised conductance change) is reduced from 11% to 5.5% for a pH change from 9 to 3 as the sensing window length is reduced from 51 to 11 μm. These results are interpreted using a simple empirical model, which is also used to demonstrate how the sensitivity degradation can be alleviated by a suitable choice of sensor window length. Furthermore, a differential sensor design is proposed that eliminates the detrimental effects of parasitic resistance. Measurements on the differential sensor give a sensitivity of 15%, which is in good agreement with the predicted maximum sensitivity obtained from modeling.Entities:
Keywords: Biosensor; Differential biosensor; Nanoribbon; Nanowire; Parasitic resistance; pH sensor
Year: 2015 PMID: 25852375 PMCID: PMC4385057 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-015-0794-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1Normalized conductance change (sensitivity) measured after changes of pH for two sensors with different sensing window lengths.
Figure 2Schematic cross-section and plan views of the polysilicon nanoribbon biosensor.
Figure 3Modeled normalized conductance change (sensitivity) as a function of sensing window length at different values of pH. The graph also includes measured data from two devices with sensing window lengths of 11 and 31 μm.
Figure 4Predicted normalized conductance change as a function of window length for different values of parasitic resistance.
Figure 5Schematic illustration of the differential design and measurement configuration. Two sensors are used for the differential measurement, with long and short sensing windows. The sensors are otherwise identical.
Figure 6Measured normalized differential conductance change (sensitivity) for the differential sensor after changes in solution pH.
Comparison of measured sensitivity of the differential biosensor with modeled maximum values (for parasitic resistance equal to zero)
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| 7 | 6.0% | 6.0% |
| 5 | 11.5% | 11.6% |
| 3 | 15.1% | 15.6% |