Issue 11, 2007

Electroacoustic miniaturized DNA-biosensor

Abstract

A micrometer-sized electroacoustic DNA-biosensor was developed. The device included a thin semi-crystalline polyethylene terephthalate (PET) dielectric layer with two Ag microband electrodes on one side and a DNA thiol-labeled monolayer adsorbed on a gold surface on the other. A resonance wave was observed at 29 MHz with a network analyzer, upon AC voltage application between the two Ag electrodes, corresponding to electromechanical coupling induced by molecular dipoles of the PET polymer chain in the dielectric layer. It was found that the device size and geometry were well adapted to detect DNA hybridization, by measuring the capacity of the resonance response evolution: hybridization induced polarization of the dielectric material that affected the electromechanical coupling established in the dielectric layer. The 0.2 mm2 sensor sensitive area allows detection in small volumes and still has higher detection levels for bioanalytical applications, the non-contact configuration adopted avoids electric faradic reactions that may damage biosensor sensitive layers, and finally, PET is a costless raw material, easy to process and well adapted for large scale production. The well-balanced technological and economic advantages of this kind of device make it a good candidate for biochip integration.

Graphical abstract: Electroacoustic miniaturized DNA-biosensor

Article information

Article type
Technical Note
Submitted
24 May 2007
Accepted
12 Jul 2007
First published
06 Aug 2007

Lab Chip, 2007,7, 1607-1609

Electroacoustic miniaturized DNA-biosensor

J. Gamby, M. Lazerges, C. Pernelle, H. Perrot, H. H. Girault and B. Tribollet, Lab Chip, 2007, 7, 1607 DOI: 10.1039/B707881A

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