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Power and Sensitivity Management of Carbon Nanotube Transistor Glucose Biosensors.

Jianping HeXianmao CaoHaiyang LiuYuqi LiangHong ChenMengmeng XiaoZhi-Yong Zhang
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), which is significant for the daily management of diabetes, requires a low-power-consumption sensor system that can track low nanomolar levels of glucose in physiological fluids, such as sweat and tears. However, traditional electrochemical methods are limited to analytes in micromolar to millimolar ranges and entail high power consumption. Carbon nanotube (CNT) film field-effect transistors (FETs) are promising for constructing extremely sensitive biosensors, but their wide applications in CGM are limited by the strong screening effect of physiological fluids and the zero charge of glucose molecules. In this study, we demonstrate a glucose aptamer-modified CNT FET biosensor to realize a highly sensitive CGM system with sub-nW power consumption by applying a suitable gate voltage. A positive gate voltage can enlarge the effective Debye screening length at the double layer to reduce the local ion population nearby and then improve the sensitivity of the FET-based biosensors by 5 times. We construct CNT FET sensors for CGM with a limit of detection of 0.5 fM, a record dynamic range up to 10 9 , and a power consumption down to ∼100 pW. The proposed field-modulated sensing performance scheme is applicable to other aptamer-based FET biosensors for detecting neutral or less charged molecules and opens opportunities to develop facilely modulated, highly sensitive, low-power, and noninvasive CGM systems.
Keyphrases
  • label free
  • carbon nanotubes
  • gold nanoparticles
  • blood glucose
  • sensitive detection
  • type diabetes
  • cardiovascular disease
  • molecularly imprinted
  • quantum dots
  • solid phase extraction
  • visible light