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Noise considerations in field-effect biosensors
Journal article

Noise considerations in field-effect biosensors

Abstract

Field-effect sensors used to detect and identify biological species have been proposed as alternatives to other methods such as fluorescence deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) microarrays. Sensors fabricated using commercial complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology would enable low-cost and highly integrated biological detection systems. In this paper, the small-signal and noise modeling of biosensors implemented with electrolyte-insulator-semiconductor structures is studied, with emphasis on design guidelines for low-noise performance. In doing so, a modified form of the general charge sheet metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor model that better fits the electrolyte-insulator-semiconductor structure is used. It is discussed how if the reference electrode and the insulator-electrolyte generate no noise associated with charge transport, then the main noise mechanisms are the resistive losses of the electrolyte and the low-frequency noise of the field-effect transistor. It is also found that for realistic sensor geometries and high electrolyte concentrations, the noise from the field-effect transistor (FET) dominates the thermal noise from the electrolyte resistance, and the optimal biasing point for the FET for minimum noise is found to be around moderate inversion.

Authors

Deen MJ; Shinwari MW; Ranuárez JC; Landheer D

Journal

Journal of Applied Physics, Vol. 100, No. 7,

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Publication Date

October 1, 2006

DOI

10.1063/1.2355542

ISSN

0021-8979

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