Publication | Open Access
Dual‐Gate Organic Field‐Effect Transistors as Potentiometric Sensors in Aqueous Solution
152
Citations
32
References
2010
Year
EngineeringOrganic ElectronicsOrganic ChemistryBiomedical EngineeringChemistryChemical EngineeringElectronic DevicesBiosensing SystemsCation SensingChemical SensorElectrical EngineeringOrganic SemiconductorThreshold VoltageOrganic MaterialsBiomedical SensorsElectronic MaterialsSensorsBiomedical DiagnosticsDual‐gate Organic TransducersAbstract Buried ElectrodesElectroanalytical SensorPotentiometric Sensors
Abstract Buried electrodes and protection of the semiconductor with a thin passivation layer are used to yield dual‐gate organic transducers. The process technology is scaled up to 150‐mm wafers. The transducers are potentiometric sensors where the detection relies on measuring a shift in the threshold voltage caused by changes in the electrochemical potential at the second gate dielectric. Analytes can only be detected within the Debye screening length. The mechanism is assessed by pH measurements. The threshold voltage shift depends on pH as Δ V th = ( C top / C bottom ) × 58 mV per pH unit, indicating that the sensitivity can be enhanced with respect to conventional ion‐sensitive field‐effect transistors (ISFETs) by adjusting the ratio of the top and bottom gate capacitances. Remaining challenges and opportunities are discussed.
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