posted on 2017-06-21, 00:00authored byTing Wu, Abdullah Alharbi, Kai-Dyi You, Kim Kisslinger, Eric A. Stach, Davood Shahrjerdi
Dual-gate field-effect biosensors
(bioFETs) with asymmetric gate
capacitances were shown to surpass the Nernst limit of 59 mV/pH. However,
previous studies have conflicting findings on the effect of the capacitive
amplification scheme on the sensor detection limit, which is inversely
proportional to the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Here, we present
a systematic experimental investigation of the SNR using ultrathin
silicon transistors. Our sensors operate at low voltage and feature
asymmetric front and back oxide capacitances with asymmetry factors
of 1.4 and 2.3. We demonstrate that in the dual-gate configuration,
the response of our bioFETs to the pH change increases proportional
to the asymmetry factor and indeed exceeds the Nernst limit. Further,
our results reveal that the noise amplitude also increases in proportion
to the asymmetry factor. We establish that the commensurate increase
of the noise amplitude originates from the intrinsic low-frequency
characteristic of the sensor noise, dominated by number fluctuation.
These findings suggest that this capacitive signal amplification scheme
does not improve the intrinsic detection limit of the dual-gate biosensors.