Abstract

Surface modification layer of a silicon substrate has been used to enhance the performance of graphene field-effect transistors (FETs). In this report, ultrathin and chemically robust polymer brush was used as a surface modification to enhance the gas sensing properties of graphene FETs. The insertion of the polymer brush decreased substrate-induced doping of graphene. This leads to a huge increase in field-effect mobility as well as a minimum shift of the Dirac point voltage. The use of the polymer brush enables fast detection of target gas molecules because graphene sensing modality can be maximized at the undoped state of graphene. The increase of source-drain current, as well as the abrupt decrease of electron mobility upon NO2 exposure, was utilized for the instantaneous detection, and a limit of detection of 4.8 ppb was achieved with graphene FETs on PS brush. We also showed excellent cross-sensitivity of graphene gas sensors to NH3, CO2, and relative humidity condition; the source-drain current decreases upon NH3 exposure, while response to CO2 or relative humidity condition is extremely low. Our results prove that reducing the substrate-induced doping of graphene with a polymer brush is a direct method for boosting the gas sensing properties of graphene FETs.

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