Tuning the pH Response of Monolayer Hexagonal Boron Nitride/Graphene Field-Effect Transistors
Nicholas E. Fuhr, Mohamed Azize, and David J. Bishop

TL;DR
This study investigates how a monolayer hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) capping layer affects the pH sensing capabilities of graphene field-effect transistors, demonstrating improved linearity and reduced variability in pH measurements.
Contribution
It introduces the use of hBN capping on graphene FETs for pH sensing and explores how dielectric surface modifications tune their electronic response.
Findings
hBN capping improves linearity and reduces measurement variability
Surface modification with nanoscale dielectrics tunes pH response
Al2O3 thickness affects pH-dependent electronic properties
Abstract
The chemical activity of ionized hydrogen describes the potency of protons in solution and is used to define the pH with wide-ranging applications in biological and materials sciences. Measuring pH with graphene field-effect transistors (FETs) has been described in the past but has yet to be characterized with a monolayer hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) capping layer. hBN capping is hypothesized to lower the chemical affinity of protons to oxidized defects in the graphene crystal and lower the standard deviation of pH measurement via screening charge density. First, the electronic properties of commercial, monolayer graphene and monolayer hBN/graphene, both on four-inch 90 nm SiO2/p-type Si, were contrasted as a function of solutal pH in 10 mM phosphate buffered solution. The two-dimensional (2D) FETs were fabricated with photoresistless metallization followed by microcentrifuge…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene research and applications · Analytical Chemistry and Sensors · Gas Sensing Nanomaterials and Sensors
