Semiconductive single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT)-based
transistors
have long and extensively been explored for sensing applications,
biosensors in particular, but reproducible reliable results remain
elusive. The random distribution of the nanotube network, as well
as the variation of the network due to deformation or surrounding
fluidic dynamics, leads to fluctuation of the channel current, which
is difficult to control. The signal-to-noise ratio is thus low, and
calibration is required. To mitigate this challenge, SWNT-based twin
transistors are introduced, where one acts as a sensor and the other
as a reference. The twin transistors share gate and source electrodes,
and all of the source/drain electrodes are sealed by a parylene layer
to minimize electrolytic leakage. A common-source amplifier circuit
generates voltage signal readouts from the sensor and reference transistors,
and the differential outputs reduce the noise level by 59%. Arrays
of twin transistors were fabricated in a hybrid process involving
photolithography, solution-based deposition of the SWNTs, and transfer
to a polyurethane substrate. To demonstrate glucose biosensing, glucose
oxidase was immobilized on the SWNTs in the sensor channels. A semipermeable
Nafion layer was applied to embed the SWNT network. This resulted
in a sensor that can deliver real-time detection of glucose in human
serum and a 100% increase in normalized responses per decade of glucose
concentrations between 100 μM and 100 mM. The response is proportional
to the cubic root of glucose concentration, indicating that the redox
electrons conducted by the nanotubes in the channel length direction
contribute to the sensor response. A portable glucose-sensing system
with flexible twin transistors is also demonstrated without the need
for device-specific calibrations.