Abstract

A wide range of approaches have been explored to meet the challenges of graphene nanostructure fabrication, all requiring complex and high-end nanofabrication platform and suffering from surface contaminations, potentially giving electrical noise and increasing the thickness of the atomically thin graphene membrane. Here, with the use of an electrical pulse on a low-capacitance graphene-on-glass (GOG) membrane, we fabricated clean graphene nanopores on commercially available glass substrates with exceptionally low electrical noise. In situ liquid AFM studies and electrochemical measurements revealed that both graphene nanopore nucleation and growth stem from the electrochemical attack on carbon atoms at defect sites, ensuring the creation of a graphene nanopore. Strikingly, compared to conventional TEM drilled graphene nanopores on SiN supporting membranes, GOG nanopores featured an order-of-magnitude reduced broadband noise, which we ascribed to the electrochemical refreshing of graphene nanopore on mechanically stable glass chips with negligible parasitic capacitance (∼1 pF). Further experiments on double-stranded DNA translocations demonstrated a greatly reduced current noise, and also confirmed the activation of single nanopores. Therefore, the exceptionally low noise and ease of fabrication will facilitate the understanding of the fundamental property and the application of such atomically thin nanopore sensors.

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