Open Carbon Nanopipettes
as Resistive-Pulse Sensors,
Rectification Sensors, and Electrochemical Nanoprobes
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Abstract
Nanometer-sized
glass and quartz pipettes have been widely used
as a core of chemical sensors, patch clamps, and scanning probe microscope
tips. Many of those applications require the control of the surface
charge and chemical state of the inner pipette wall. Both objectives
can be attained by coating the inner wall of a quartz pipette with
a nanometer-thick layer of carbon. In this letter, we demonstrate
the possibility of using open carbon nanopipettes (CNP) produced by
chemical vapor deposition as resistive-pulse sensors, rectification
sensors, and electrochemical nanoprobes. By applying a potential to
the carbon layer, one can change the surface charge and electrical
double-layer at the pipette wall, which, in turn, affect the ion current
rectification and adsorption/desorption processes essential for resistive-pulse
sensors. CNPs can also be used as versatile electrochemical probes
such as asymmetric bipolar nanoelectrodes and dual electrodes based
on simultaneous recording of the ion current through the pipette and
the current produced by oxidation/reduction of molecules at the carbon
nanoring