4.6 Article

Faradaic effects in electrochemically gated graphene sensors in the presence of redox active molecules

Journal

NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 40, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/ab98bc

Keywords

graphene; redox; field-effect; electron transfer; Faradaic current; sensor

Funding

  1. German Science Foundation (DFG) as part of the excellence initiative via the Graduate School of Analytical Sciences Adlershof [GSC1013 SALSA]

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Field-effect transistors (FETs) based on graphene are promising devices for the direct sensing of a range of analytes in solution. We show here that the presence of redox active molecules in the analyte solution leads to the occurrence of heterogeneous electron transfer with graphene generating a Faradaic current (electron transfer) in a FET configuration resulting in shifts of the Dirac point. Such a shift occurs if the Faradaic current is significantly high, e.g. due to a large graphene area. Furthermore, the redox shift based on the Faradaic current, reminiscent of a doping-like effect, is found to be non-Nernstian and dependent on parameters known from electrode kinetics in potentiodynamic methods, such as the electrode area, the standard potential of the redox probes and the scan rate of the gate voltage modulation. This behavior clearly differentiates this effect from other transduction mechanisms based on electrostatic interactions or molecular charge transfer doping effects, which are usually behind a shift of the Dirac point. These observations suggest that large-area unmodified/pristine graphene in field-effect sensors behaves as a non-polarized electrode in liquid. Strategies for ensuring a polarized interface are discussed.

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