Abstract
Aligned and suspended carbon nanotubes can outperform randomly oriented networks in electronic biosensing and thin-film electronics. However, carbon nanotubes tend to bundle and form random networks. Here, we show that carbon nanotubes spontaneously align in an ammonium deoxycholate surfactant gel even under low shear forces, allowing direct writing and printing of nanotubes into electrically conducting wires and aligned thin layers across trenches. To demonstrate its application potential, we directly printed arrays of disposable electrical biosensors, which show femtomolar sensitivity in the detection of DNA and SARS-CoV-2 RNA.
Published Version
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