Issue 10, 2012

Nanoscale ear drum: Graphene based nanoscale sensors

Abstract

The difficulty in determining the mass of a sample increases as its size diminishes. At the nanoscale, there are no direct methods for resolving the mass of single molecules or nanoparticles and so more sophisticated approaches based on electromechanical phenomena are required. More importantly, one demands that such nanoelectromechanical techniques could provide not only information about the mass of the target molecules but also about their geometrical properties. In this sense, we report a theoretical study that illustrates in detail how graphene membranes can operate as nanoelectromechanical mass-sensor devices. Wide graphene sheets were exposed to different types and amounts of molecules and molecular dynamic simulations were employed to treat these doping processes statistically. We demonstrate that the mass variation effect and information about the graphene–molecule interactions can be inferred through dynamical response functions. Our results confirm the potential use of graphene as a mass detector device with remarkable precision in estimating variations in mass at the molecular scale and other physical properties of the dopants.

Graphical abstract: Nanoscale ear drum: Graphene based nanoscale sensors

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Jan 2012
Accepted
11 Mar 2012
First published
14 Mar 2012

Nanoscale, 2012,4, 3168-3174

Nanoscale ear drum: Graphene based nanoscale sensors

S. M. Avdoshenko, C. Gomes da Rocha and G. Cuniberti, Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 3168 DOI: 10.1039/C2NR30097D

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