domingo, 19 de mayo de 2013

Sensitivity Limits and Scaling of Bioelectronic Graphene Transducers

Semiconducting nanomaterials are being intensively studied as active elements in bioelectronic devices, with the aim of improving spatial resolution. Yet, the consequences of size-reduction on fundamental noise limits, or minimum resolvable signals, and their impact on device design considerations have not been defined. Here, we address these key issues by quantifying the size-dependent performance and limiting factors 
of graphene (Gra) transducers under physiological conditions. We show that suspended Gra devices represent the optimal configuration for cardiac extracellular electrophysiology in terms of both transducer sensitivity, systematically ∼5× higher than substrate-supported devices, and forming tight bioelectronic interfaces. Significantly, noise measurements on freestanding Gra together with theoretical calculations yield a direct relationship between low-frequency 1/f noise and water dipole-induced disorders, which sets fundamental sensitivity limits for Gra devices in physiological media. As a consequence, a square-root-of-area scaling of Gra transducer sensitivity was experimentally revealed to provide a critical design rule for their implementation in bioelectronics


Bibliografía: 


Nano Lett., Article ASAP
DOI: 10.1021/nl401276n
Publication Date (Web): May 2, 2013
Copyright © 2013 American Chemical Society

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario