Dmitry Kireev
Forschungszentrum Jülich
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Featured researches published by Dmitry Kireev.
Biosensors | 2016
Dmitry Kireev; Silke Seyock; Mathis Ernst; Vanessa Maybeck; Bernhard Wolfrum; Andreas Offenhäusser
Graphene is a promising material possessing features relevant to bioelectronics applications. Graphene microelectrodes (GMEAs), which are fabricated in a dense array on a flexible polyimide substrate, were investigated in this work for their performance via electrical impedance spectroscopy. Biocompatibility and suitability of the GMEAs for extracellular recordings were tested by measuring electrical activities from acute heart tissue and cardiac muscle cells. The recordings show encouraging signal-to-noise ratios of 65 ± 15 for heart tissue recordings and 20 ± 10 for HL-1 cells. Considering the low noise and excellent robustness of the devices, the sensor arrays are suitable for diverse and biologically relevant applications.
Nano Letters | 2016
Wangyang Fu; Lingyan Feng; Dirk Mayer; Gregory Panaitov; Dmitry Kireev; Andreas Offenhäusser; Hans Joachim Krause
In this Letter, the ambipolar properties of an electrolyte-gated graphene field-effect transistor (GFET) have been explored to fabricate frequency-doubling biochemical sensor devices. By biasing the ambipolar GFETs in a common-source configuration, an input sinusoidal voltage at frequency f applied to the electrolyte gate can be rectified to a sinusoidal wave at frequency 2f at the drain electrode. The extraordinary high carrier mobility of graphene and the strong electrolyte gate coupling provide the graphene ambipolar frequency doubler an unprecedented unity gain, as well as a detection limit of ∼4 pM for 11-mer single strand DNA molecules in 1 mM PBS buffer solution. Combined with an improved drift characteristics and an enhanced low-frequency 1/f noise performance by sampling at doubled frequency, this good detection limit suggests the graphene ambipolar frequency doubler a highly promising biochemical sensing platform.
Science Advances | 2017
Wangyang Fu; Lingyan Feng; Gregory Panaitov; Dmitry Kireev; Dirk Mayer; Andreas Offenhäusser; Hans-Joachim Krause
Using the charge neutrality point promises low-noise graphene electronic sensors. Over the past decade, the richness of electronic properties of graphene has attracted enormous interest for electrically detecting chemical and biological species using this two-dimensional material. However, the creation of practical graphene electronic sensors greatly depends on our ability to understand and maintain a low level of electronic noise, the fundamental reason limiting the sensor resolution. Conventionally, to reach the largest sensing response, graphene transistors are operated at the point of maximum transconductance, where 1/f noise is found to be unfavorably high and poses a major limitation in any attempt to further improve the device sensitivity. We show that operating a graphene transistor in an ambipolar mode near its neutrality point can markedly reduce the 1/f noise in graphene. Remarkably, our data reveal that this reduction in the electronic noise is achieved with uncompromised sensing response of the graphene chips and thus significantly improving the signal-to-noise ratio—compared to that of a conventionally operated graphene transistor for conductance measurement. As a proof-of-concept demonstration of the usage of the aforementioned new sensing scheme to a broader range of biochemical sensing applications, we selected an HIV-related DNA hybridization as the test bed and achieved detections at picomolar concentrations.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Dmitry Kireev; Max Brambach; Silke Seyock; Vanessa Maybeck; Wangyang Fu; Bernhard Wolfrum; Andreas Offenhäusser
This work is focused on the fabrication and analysis of graphene-based, solution-gated field effect transistor arrays (GFETs) on a large scale for bioelectronic measurements. The GFETs fabricated on different substrates, with a variety of gate geometries (width/length) of the graphene channel, reveal a linear relation between the transconductance and the width/length ratio. The area normalised electrolyte-gated transconductance is in the range of 1–2 mS·V−1·□ and does not strongly depend on the substrate. Influence of the ionic strength on the transistor performance is also investigated. Double contacts are found to decrease the effective resistance and the transfer length, but do not improve the transconductance. An electrochemical annealing/cleaning effect is investigated and proposed to originate from the out-of-plane gate leakage current. The devices are used as a proof-of-concept for bioelectronic sensors, recording external potentials from both: ex vivo heart tissue and in vitro cardiomyocyte-like HL-1 cells. The recordings show distinguishable action potentials with a signal to noise ratio over 14 from ex vivo tissue and over 6 from the cardiac-like cell line in vitro. Furthermore, in vitro neuronal signals are recorded by the graphene transistors with distinguishable bursting for the first time.
Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2017
Dmitry Kireev; Silke Seyock; Johannes Lewen; Vanessa Maybeck; Bernhard Wolfrum; Andreas Offenhäusser
Graphene multielectrode arrays (GMEAs) presented in this work are used for cardio and neuronal extracellular recordings. The advantages of the graphene as a part of the multielectrode arrays are numerous: from a general flexibility and biocompatibility to the unique electronic properties of graphene. The devices used for extensive in vitro studies of a cardiac-like cell line and cortical neuronal networks show excellent ability to extracellularly detect action potentials with signal to noise ratios in the range of 45 ± 22 for HL-1 cells and 48 ± 26 for spontaneous bursting/spiking neuronal activity. Complex neuronal bursting activity patterns as well as a variety of characteristic shapes of HL-1 action potentials are recorded with the GMEAs. This paper illustrates that the potential applications of the GMEAs in biological and medical research are still numerous and diverse.
Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2018
Yuanying Liang; Mathis Ernst; Fabian Brings; Dmitry Kireev; Vanessa Maybeck; Andreas Offenhäusser; Dirk Mayer
Flexible and transparent electronic devices possess crucial advantages over conventional silicon based systems for bioelectronic applications since they are able to adapt to nonplanar surfaces, cause less chronic immunoreactivity, and facilitate easy optical inspection. Here, organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) are embedded in a flexible matrix of polyimide to record cardiac action potentials. The wafer-scale fabricated devices exhibit transconductances (12 mS V-1 ) and drain-source on-to-off current ratios (≈105 ) comparable to state of the art nonflexible and superior to other reported flexible OECTs. The transfer characteristics of the devices are preserved even after experiencing extremely high bending strain and harsh crumpling. A sub-micrometer poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) doped with poly(styrenesulfonate) layer results in a fast transport of ions between the electrolyte and the polymer channel characterized by a cut-off frequency of 1200 Hz. Excellent device performance is proved by mapping the propagation of cardiac action potentials with high signal-to-noise ratio. These results demonstrate that the electrical performance of flexible OECTs can compete with hard-material-based OECTs and thus potentially be used for in vivo applications.
The International Conference on Micro- and Nano-Electronics 2016 | 2016
Aleksei Emelianov; Dmitry Kireev; Nerea Otero; Pablo Romero; I. I. Bobrinetskiy
We have developed the ultra-short pulsed laser processing methods for patterning of graphene field effect transistors in topological and chemical way. We investigated in details the photoresponse in graphene FETs before and after laser-induced modification for laser influence below threshold energy. We observed two different mechanisms of the photoresponse under ultra-short laser pulses (280 fs). The photocurrent, observed for both pristine and laser processed graphene is raised because the laser induced charge is transferred from graphene to trapped levels in SiO2 surface resulting in electrostatic Dirac point shift. For laser oxidized areas we observed more pronounced photocurrent because of heterojunction formation in laser-processed area. While for electrostatic effect the relaxation time estimated as 50 seconds, the heterojunction relaxation was observed for less than 3 ms.
Carbon | 2016
Dmitry Kireev; Dario Sarik; Tianru Wu; Xiaofeng Xie; Bernhard Wolfrum; Andreas Offenhäusser
IEEE Transactions on Nanotechnology | 2017
Dmitry Kireev; I. Zadorozhnyi; Tianyu Qiu; Dario Sarik; Fabian Brings; Tianru Wu; Silke Seyock; Vanessa Maybeck; Martin Lottner; Benno M. Blaschke; Jose A. Garrido; Xiaoming Xie; S. A. Vitusevich; Bernhard Wolfrum; Andreas Offenhüusser
MRS Advances | 2018
Dmitry Kireev; Pegah Shokoohimehr; Mathis Ernst; Viviana Rincón Montes; Kagithiri Srikantharajah; Vanessa Maybeck; Bernhard Wolfrum; Andreas Offenhäusser