Data di Pubblicazione:
2008
Abstract:
Organic thin-film transistor sensors have been recently attracting the attention of the plastic electronics community for their
potential exploitation in novel sensing platforms. Specificity and sensitivity are however still open issues: in this respect chiral
discrimination--being a scientific and technological achievement in itself--is indeed one of the most challenging sensor bench-tests.
So far, conducting-polymer solid-state chiral detection has been carried out at part-per-thousand concentration levels. Here, a novel
chiral bilayer organic thin-film transistor gas sensor--comprising an outermost layer with built-in enantioselective properties--is
demonstrated to show field-effect amplified sensitivity that enables differential detection of optical isomers in the tens-of-parts-permillion
concentration range. The ad-hoc-designed organic semiconductor endowed with chiral side groups, the bilayer structure and
the thin-film transistor transducer provide a significant step forward in the development of a high-performance and versatile sensing
platformcompatible with flexible organic electronic technologies.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Babudri, Francesco; Naso, Francesco; HASSAN OMAR, Omar
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: