posted on 2024-07-29, 10:07authored byGourav Bhattacharya, Stuart McMichael, Indrianita Lionadi, Pardis Biglarbeigi, Dewar Finlay, Pilar Fernandez-Ibanez, Amir Farokh Payam
Nanomechanical sensors, due to their small size and high
sensitivity
to the environment, hold significant promise for various sensing applications.
These sensors enable rapid, highly sensitive, and selective detection
of biological and biochemical entities as well as mass spectrometry
by utilizing the frequency shift of nanomechanical resonators. Nanomechanical
systems have been employed to measure the mass of cells and biomolecules
and study the fundamentals of surface science such as phase transitions
and diffusion. Here, we develop a methodology using both experimental
measurements and numerical simulations to explore the characteristics
of nanomechanical resonators when the detection entities are absorbed
on the cantilever surface and quantify the mass, density, and Young’s
modulus of adsorbed entities. Moreover, based on this proposed concept,
we present an experimental method for measuring the mass of molecules
and living biological entities in their physiological environment.
This approach could find applications in predicting the behavior of
bionanoelectromechanical resonators functionalized with biological
capture molecules, as well as in label-free, nonfunctionalized micro/nanoscale
biosensing and mass spectrometry of living bioentities.