An Investigation of the Mechanisms of Electronic Sensing of Protein Adsorption on Carbon Nanotube Devices

Robert J. Chen(Stanford University), Hee Cheul Choi(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Sarunya Bangsaruntip(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Erhan Yenilmez(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Xiaowu Tang(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Qian Wang(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Ying‐Lan Chang(Stanford University), Hongjie Dai(Agilent Technologies (United States))
Journal of the American Chemical Society
January 15, 2004
Cited by 517

Abstract

It has been reported that protein adsorption on single-walled carbon nanotube field effect transistors (FETs) leads to appreciable changes in the electrical conductance of the devices, a phenomenon that can be exploited for label-free detection of biomolecules with a high potential for miniaturization. This work presents an elucidation of the electronic biosensing mechanisms with a newly developed microarray of nanotube "micromat" sensors. Chemical functionalization schemes are devised to block selected components of the devices from protein adsorption, self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of methoxy(poly(ethylene glycol))thiol (mPEG-SH) on the metal electrodes (Au, Pd) and PEG-containing surfactants on the nanotubes. Extensive characterization reveals that electronic effects occurring at the metal-nanotube contacts due to protein adsorption constitute a more significant contribution to the electronic biosensing signal than adsorption solely along the exposed lengths of the nanotubes.


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