DocumentCode
270503
Title
Nanoscale electrode arrays produced with microscale lithographic techniques for use in biomedical sensing applications
Author
Terry, J.G. ; Schmüser, Ilka ; Underwood, I. ; Corrigan, Damion K. ; Freeman, Neville J. ; Bunting, A.S. ; Mount, A.R. ; Walton, A.J.
Author_Institution
Scottish Microelectron. Centre, Univ. of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
Volume
7
Issue
4
fYear
2013
fDate
Dec-13
Firstpage
125
Lastpage
134
Abstract
A novel technique for the production of nanoscale electrode arrays that uses standard microfabrication processes and micron-scale photolithography is reported here in detail. These microsquare nanoband edge electrode (MNEE) arrays have been fabricated with highly reproducible control of the key array dimensions, including the size and pitch of the individual elements and, most importantly, the width of the nanoband electrodes. The definition of lateral features to nanoscale dimensions typically requires expensive patterning techniques that are complex and low-throughput. However, the fabrication methodology used here relies on the fact that vertical dimensions (i.e. layer thicknesses) have long been manufacturable at the nanoscale using thin film deposition techniques that are well established in mainstream microelectronics. The authors report for the first time two aspects that highlight the particular suitability of these MNEE array systems for probe monolayer biosensing. The first is simulation, which shows the enhanced sensitivity to the redox reaction of the solution redox couple. The second is the enhancement of probe film functionalisation observed for the probe film model molecule, 6-mercapto-1-hexanol compared with microsquare electrodes. Such surface modification for specific probe layer biosensing and detection is of significance for a wide range of biomedical and other sensing and analytical applications.
Keywords
biomedical electrodes; microfabrication; monolayers; nanomedicine; photolithography; sensor arrays; 6-mercapto-1-hexanol molecule; biomedical sensing applications; layer thicknesses; microfabrication; micronscale photolithography; microscale lithographic techniques; microsquare nanoband edge electrode arrays; nanoscale electrode arrays; probe film functionalisation; probe monolayer biosensing; redox reaction; solution redox couple; surface modification; thin film deposition techniques;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nanobiotechnology, IET
Publisher
iet
ISSN
1751-8741
Type
jour
DOI
10.1049/iet-nbt.2013.0049
Filename
6671240
Link To Document