Field Effect Modulation of Ion Transport in Silicon-On-Insulator Nanopores and Their Application as Nanoscale Coulter Counters

abstract: In the last few years, significant advances in nanofabrication have allowed tailoring of structures and materials at a molecular level enabling nanofabrication with precise control of dimensions and organization at molecular length scales, a development leading to significant advances in n...

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Other Authors: Joshi, Punarvasu (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9258
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-92582018-06-22T03:01:53Z Field Effect Modulation of Ion Transport in Silicon-On-Insulator Nanopores and Their Application as Nanoscale Coulter Counters abstract: In the last few years, significant advances in nanofabrication have allowed tailoring of structures and materials at a molecular level enabling nanofabrication with precise control of dimensions and organization at molecular length scales, a development leading to significant advances in nanoscale systems. Although, the direction of progress seems to follow the path of microelectronics, the fundamental physics in a nanoscale system changes more rapidly compared to microelectronics, as the size scale is decreased. The changes in length, area, and volume ratios due to reduction in size alter the relative influence of various physical effects determining the overall operation of a system in unexpected ways. One such category of nanofluidic structures demonstrating unique ionic and molecular transport characteristics are nanopores. Nanopores derive their unique transport characteristics from the electrostatic interaction of nanopore surface charge with aqueous ionic solutions. In this doctoral research cylindrical nanopores, in single and array configuration, were fabricated in silicon-on-insulator (SOI) using a combination of electron beam lithography (EBL) and reactive ion etching (RIE). The fabrication method presented is compatible with standard semiconductor foundries and allows fabrication of nanopores with desired geometries and precise dimensional control, providing near ideal and isolated physical modeling systems to study ion transport at the nanometer level. Ion transport through nanopores was characterized by measuring ionic conductances of arrays of nanopores of various diameters for a wide range of concentration of aqueous hydrochloric acid (HCl) ionic solutions. Measured ionic conductances demonstrated two distinct regimes based on surface charge interactions at low ionic concentrations and nanopore geometry at high ionic concentrations. Field effect modulation of ion transport through nanopore arrays, in a fashion similar to semiconductor transistors, was also studied. Using ionic conductance measurements, it was shown that the concentration of ions in the nanopore volume was significantly changed when a gate voltage on nanopore arrays was applied, hence controlling their transport. Based on the ion transport results, single nanopores were used to demonstrate their application as nanoscale particle counters by using polystyrene nanobeads, monodispersed in aqueous HCl solutions of different molarities. Effects of field effect modulation on particle transition events were also demonstrated. Dissertation/Thesis Joshi, Punarvasu (Author) Thornton, Trevor J (Advisor) Goryll, Michael (Advisor) Spanias, Andreas (Committee member) Saraniti, Marco (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Electrical Engineering Nanotechnology Electric Double Layer Nanopore eng 159 pages Ph.D. Electrical Engineering 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9258 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical Engineering
Nanotechnology
Electric Double Layer
Nanopore
spellingShingle Electrical Engineering
Nanotechnology
Electric Double Layer
Nanopore
Field Effect Modulation of Ion Transport in Silicon-On-Insulator Nanopores and Their Application as Nanoscale Coulter Counters
description abstract: In the last few years, significant advances in nanofabrication have allowed tailoring of structures and materials at a molecular level enabling nanofabrication with precise control of dimensions and organization at molecular length scales, a development leading to significant advances in nanoscale systems. Although, the direction of progress seems to follow the path of microelectronics, the fundamental physics in a nanoscale system changes more rapidly compared to microelectronics, as the size scale is decreased. The changes in length, area, and volume ratios due to reduction in size alter the relative influence of various physical effects determining the overall operation of a system in unexpected ways. One such category of nanofluidic structures demonstrating unique ionic and molecular transport characteristics are nanopores. Nanopores derive their unique transport characteristics from the electrostatic interaction of nanopore surface charge with aqueous ionic solutions. In this doctoral research cylindrical nanopores, in single and array configuration, were fabricated in silicon-on-insulator (SOI) using a combination of electron beam lithography (EBL) and reactive ion etching (RIE). The fabrication method presented is compatible with standard semiconductor foundries and allows fabrication of nanopores with desired geometries and precise dimensional control, providing near ideal and isolated physical modeling systems to study ion transport at the nanometer level. Ion transport through nanopores was characterized by measuring ionic conductances of arrays of nanopores of various diameters for a wide range of concentration of aqueous hydrochloric acid (HCl) ionic solutions. Measured ionic conductances demonstrated two distinct regimes based on surface charge interactions at low ionic concentrations and nanopore geometry at high ionic concentrations. Field effect modulation of ion transport through nanopore arrays, in a fashion similar to semiconductor transistors, was also studied. Using ionic conductance measurements, it was shown that the concentration of ions in the nanopore volume was significantly changed when a gate voltage on nanopore arrays was applied, hence controlling their transport. Based on the ion transport results, single nanopores were used to demonstrate their application as nanoscale particle counters by using polystyrene nanobeads, monodispersed in aqueous HCl solutions of different molarities. Effects of field effect modulation on particle transition events were also demonstrated. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Electrical Engineering 2011
author2 Joshi, Punarvasu (Author)
author_facet Joshi, Punarvasu (Author)
title Field Effect Modulation of Ion Transport in Silicon-On-Insulator Nanopores and Their Application as Nanoscale Coulter Counters
title_short Field Effect Modulation of Ion Transport in Silicon-On-Insulator Nanopores and Their Application as Nanoscale Coulter Counters
title_full Field Effect Modulation of Ion Transport in Silicon-On-Insulator Nanopores and Their Application as Nanoscale Coulter Counters
title_fullStr Field Effect Modulation of Ion Transport in Silicon-On-Insulator Nanopores and Their Application as Nanoscale Coulter Counters
title_full_unstemmed Field Effect Modulation of Ion Transport in Silicon-On-Insulator Nanopores and Their Application as Nanoscale Coulter Counters
title_sort field effect modulation of ion transport in silicon-on-insulator nanopores and their application as nanoscale coulter counters
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9258
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