4.5 Article

MULTISCALE MODELING OF PLANAR AND NANOWIRE FIELD-EFFECT BIOSENSORS

Journal

SIAM JOURNAL ON APPLIED MATHEMATICS
Volume 70, Issue 5, Pages 1634-1654

Publisher

SIAM PUBLICATIONS
DOI: 10.1137/080725027

Keywords

Poisson equation; multiscale problem; interface conditions; homogenization; numerical simulation; field-effect biosensor; BioFET; nanowire

Funding

  1. Stadt Wien - OAW (Austrian Academy of Sciences)
  2. FWF (Austrian Science Fund) [P20871-N13]
  3. Austrian Ministry of Science
  4. EU [MEST-CT-2005-021122]
  5. National Science Foundation [DMS-0718308]
  6. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P 20871] Funding Source: researchfish

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Field-effect nanobiosensors (or BioFETs, biologically sensitive field-effect transistors) have recently been demonstrated experimentally and have thus gained interest as a technology for direct, label-free, real-time, and highly sensitive detection of biomolecules. The experiments have not been accompanied by a quantitative understanding of the underlying detection mechanism. The modeling of field-effect biosensors poses a multiscale problem due to the different length scales in the sensors: the charge distribution and the electric potential of the biofunctionalized surface layer changes on the Angstrom length scale, whereas the exposed sensor area is measured in micrometers squared. Here a multiscale model for the electrostatics of planar and nanowire field-effect sensors is developed by homogenization of the Poisson equation in the biofunctionalized boundary layer. The resulting interface conditions depend on the surface charge density and dipole moment density of the boundary layer. The multiscale model can be coupled to any charge transport model and hence makes the self-consistent quantitative investigation of the physics of field-effect sensors possible. Numerical verifications of the multiscale model are given. Furthermore a silicon nanowire biosensor is simulated to elucidate the influence of the surface charge density and the dipole moment density on the conductance of the semiconductor transducer. The numerical evidence shows that the conductance varies exponentially as a function of both charge and dipole moment. Therefore the dipole moment of the surface layer must be included in biosensor models. The conductance variations observed in experiments can be explained by the field effect, and they can be caused by a change in dipole moment alone.

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