6 research outputs found

    Graphene inspired sensing devices

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    Graphene’s exciting characteristics such as high mechanical strength, tuneable electrical prop- erties, high thermal conductivity, elasticity, large surface-to-volume ratio, make it unique and attractive for a plethora of applications including gas and liquid sensing. Adsorption, the phys- ical bonding of molecules on solid surfaces, has huge impact on the electronic properties of graphene. We use this to develop gas sensing devices with faster response time by suspending graphene over large area (cm^2) on silicon nanowire arrays (SiNWAs). These are fabricated by two-step metal-assisted chemical etching (MACE) and using a home-developed polymer-assisted graphene transfer (PAGT) process. The advantage of suspending graphene is the removal of diffusion-limited access to the adsorption sites at the interface between graphene and its support. By modifying the Langmuir adsorption model and fitting the experimental response curves, we find faster response times for both ammonia and acetone vapours. The use of suspended graphene improved the overall response, based on speed and amplitude of response, by up to 750% on average. This device could find applications in biomedical breath analysis for diseases such lung cancer, asthma, kidney failure and more. Taking advantage of the mechanical strength of graphene and using the developed PAGT process, we transfer it on commercial (CMOS) Ion-Sensitive Field-Effect Transistor (ISFET) arrays. The deposition of graphene on the top sensing layer reduces drift that results from the surface modification during exposure to electrolyte while improving the overall performance by up to about 10^13 % and indicates that the ISFET can operate with metallic sensing membrane and not only with insulating materials as confirmed by depositing Au on the gate surface. Post- processing of the ISFET top surface by reactive ion plasma etching, proved that the physical location of trapped charge lies within the device structure. The process improved its overall performance by about 105 %. The post-processing of the ISFET could be applied for sensor performance in any of its applications including pH sensing for DNA sequencing and glucose monitoring.Open Acces

    Structural and Transport Properties of Directly Assembled Nanowires

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    In this work, we present a systematic study on the assembly and characterization of nanostructures. We employed self and directed assembly methods in order to organize nanostructures. Quantitative film balance studies of self-assembled semiconductor nanoparticles enabled the determination of their effective interparticle potential. As a directed-assembly method, dielectrophoresis was used in the fabrication of interconnects from dispersions of nanostructures between targeted points in external circuitry. Directed electrochemical nanowire assembly (DENA) was developed and used in the fabrication of metallic nanowires from simple salt solutions. The structural and charge transport properties of the assembled nanostructures and the DENA-grown nanowires were characterized. The CdSe nanoparticles of a given diameter were found to behave like hard-disks with significantly smaller diameters. This behavior was attributed to an attractive contribution to the interparticle potential, such as the dipolar potential. We found that nanoparticulate CdS converts to bulk CdS during dielectrophoretic interconnect fabrication. We demonstrated that the dielectrophoretic interconnects fabricated from gold nanorods are nanostructured, limiting their conductivity. DENA technique enabled the single-step growth and low-resistance interconnecting of crystalline diameter-tunable metallic nanowires. The preliminary results of the diameter-dependent resistivity studies with the DENA-grown gold nanowires were consistent with the predicted behavior.Department of Physic

    Yearbook 2010 (Institute of Technical Physics and Materials Science of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences)

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    College of Engineering

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    Cornell University Courses of Study Vol. 102 2010/201

    College of Engineering

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    Cornell University Courses of Study Vol. 102 2010/201
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