| Literature DB >> 26928906 |
Wangyang Fu1, Lingyan Feng1, Dirk Mayer1, Gregory Panaitov1, Dmitry Kireev1, Andreas Offenhäusser1, Hans-Joachim Krause1.
Abstract
In this Letter, the ambipolar properties of an electrolyte-gated graphene field-effect transistor (GFET) have been explored to fabricate frequency-doubling biochemical sensor devices. By biasing the ambipolar GFETs in a common-source configuration, an input sinusoidal voltage at frequency f applied to the electrolyte gate can be rectified to a sinusoidal wave at frequency 2f at the drain electrode. The extraordinary high carrier mobility of graphene and the strong electrolyte gate coupling provide the graphene ambipolar frequency doubler an unprecedented unity gain, as well as a detection limit of ∼4 pM for 11-mer single strand DNA molecules in 1 mM PBS buffer solution. Combined with an improved drift characteristics and an enhanced low-frequency 1/f noise performance by sampling at doubled frequency, this good detection limit suggests the graphene ambipolar frequency doubler a highly promising biochemical sensing platform.Entities:
Keywords: DNA; ambipolar; biosensors; field-effect transistors; frequency doublers; graphene
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26928906 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b04729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189