Publication | Closed Access
Fabrication and characterization of a solid-state nanopore with self-aligned carbon nanoelectrodes for molecular detection
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Citations
35
References
2012
Year
EngineeringNanoporous MaterialMolecular DetectionMolecular BiologySelf-aligned Carbon NanoelectrodesTransverse ElectrodesDna NanotechnologyChemical EngineeringNanoscale ChemistryCarbon-based MaterialNanoelectronicsNanosensorDna ComputingNanotechnology FabricationSolid-state NanoporeCarbon NanotubesBiophysicsStochastic Molecular SensorsNanotechnologyNanobiotechnologyNanomaterialsBioelectronicsNanoreactorGrapheneElectroanalytical SensorNanopores
Stochastic molecular sensors based on resistive pulse nanopore modalities are envisioned as facile DNA sequencers. However, recent advances in nanotechnology fabrication have highlighted promising alternative detection mechanisms with higher sensitivity and potential single-base resolution. In this paper we present the novel self-aligned fabrication of a solid-state nanopore device with integrated transverse graphene-like carbon nanoelectrodes for polyelectrolyte molecular detection. The electrochemical transduction mechanism is characterized and found to result primarily from thermionic emission between the two transverse electrodes. Response of the nanopore to Lambda dsDNA and short (16-mer) ssDNA is demonstrated and distinguished.
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