The invention refers to a semiconductor base structure for molecular electronics and molecular electronics-based biosensor applications and a method for producing such a structure.
Various approaches for molecular electronics (ME) have been reported in the literature. More recent ones include conductance studies through single conjugated molecules (M. A. Reed et al., Science 1999, J. Reichert et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 2002) or through whole monolayers embedded between Au electrodes near a silicon gate electrode (J. H. Schön et al., Nature 2001). The electrode fabrication either relies on metal break junction techniques where the electrode distance has to be adjusted to the molecules' length or on metal deposition (evaporation) onto a previously prepared molecule monolayer. Currently used or proposed techniques for biomolecule (in particular protein) detection, analysis, quantification or interaction studies include publications and patents about, e.g., classical two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, micro-capillary electrokinetic separation techniques with fluorescent readout, micro-array analogs to DNA (MacBeath G. and Schreiber S L, Science 2000), plasmon-resonance, quartz microbalance, silicon structures based capacitive setups (Berggren et al., Electroanalysis 2001), light addressable potentiometric sensors (George et al., Sensors and Acuators, 2000), Silicon FETs (Schöning and Luth, 2001, Cloarec et al., Sensors and Acuators, 1999, Snow et al. US2002012937), mechanical strain based detection using Si cantilevers (Fritz et al., Science, 2000) or functionalized, chemically deposited Si nanostructures (Cui et al., Science 2001). In a recently filed patent application some of the present inventors propose the use of functionalized, highly sensitive sub-μm size lateral field effect transistors based on Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) technology (G. Abstreiter, A. R. Bausch, K. Buchholz, S. Luber, M. G. Nikolaides, S. Rauschenbach, E. Sackmann, M. Tornow: Silicon-on-Insulator biosensor device, Germany, DPA 102 21 799.8, April 2002).
Employing electrochemistry based ME for biosensor applications was recently demonstrated by E. M. Boon, J. E. Salas, J. K. Barton, Nature Biotechnology, Volume 20, Page 282, 2002. A pure ME approach however, where the sensing organic wire is connected to solid electrodes on both ends is not known to the authors.
In most presently used schemes investigating ME the metal electrodes are connected to the organic nano-wire after it has been formed and positioned. Either a top electrode is being deposited on top of a monolayer film of molecules. This procedure carries the risk of damaging the sensitive film by creating pin-holes, defects or incorporating metal particles as clusters into it. It may either destroy the device (short circuit) or easily give rise to artifacts such as tunneling phenomena through metal islands rather than molecular wires. In the other main approach of using break junctions the electrode distance has to be adjusted dynamically to the molecule length according to the current-voltage characteristics monitored in parallel. In addition to the elaborate setup which cannot be easily integrated into an array on a chip scale the finally obtained distance is not absolutely known but only concluded indirectly from the measured conductance.
The opposite approach of first preparing the miniaturized electrode design, on which the molecular wires then can attach has been limited to relatively long molecules such as DNA or carbon nanotubes (group of C. Dekker, T U Delft, C. F. J. Tans et al., Volume 386, Page 474, 1997) due to the limitations of advanced lithographic techniques such as, e.g., electron beam lithography which can merely produce structures less than a few ten nm.
Biomolecular interactions have been studied by various label-bound techniques proving the binding reaction between specific molecule partners. The direct impact of the binding reaction onto the electronic configuration of the involved reactants however may become accessible by the described method of measuring the conductance of one of the molecules in real-time during its binding reaction to an analyte molecule.
It is the problem underlying the invention to find a semiconductor base structure according to the preamble of claim 1 which does not have the disadvantages mentioned and to find a method for producing such a semiconductor base structure according to claim 5.
The underlying problem is solved for a semiconductor base structure by the features of claim 1, especially in connection with the subclaims 2 to 10 and by a method for producing such a semiconductor base structure according to claim 11, especially in connection with claims 12 to 14.
The proposed semiconductor base structure for molecular electronics (ME) and ME-based biosensor applications comprises a patterned semiconductor heterostructure surface forming the source, drain and gate contacts to build up electronic devices such as transistors from conductive organic “wires” (such as organic molecules with conjugated π-electron system, DNA oligonucleotides, carbon nanotubes). By eventually further functionalizing the organic wire of this hybrid system with, e.g., receptors for biomolecular recognition such as antibodies or proteins the device can be employed as highly sensitive electrical biosensor for the detection, analysis and quantification of specific biomolecules and their mutual interaction, e.g., DNA-protein interaction.
Starting point for the device basis preparation is a semiconductor heterostructure which can be epitaxially grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) and consists of two thick (typically several hundred nm) undoped layers of material “A” separated by an extremely thin (few nm) doped conductive layer of different semiconductor material “B”, or of different composition in case of compound semiconductors. This material stack is being cleaved perpendicular to the layer planes and the obtained cleavage plane is subsequently selectively etched such that only the central thin layer “B” is removed a few nm deep into the cleavage plane. Finally, a thin (few nm) metal layer is deposited on the etched cleavage plane to form conductive source and drain electrodes on top of material “A” in such way that those are separated only by the very short, groove-like “nano-gap”.
The active region to be bridged by the wires may be reduced to a few square-nm by again cleaving the heterostructure perpendicular to the first direction before selective etching. The latter will be followed then by a two step metal evaporation from different directions such that the area of minimal electrodes distance is located exactly at the structure's corner. As illustrated in
Selective binding of a bio-molecular analyte to the organic wire, either directly in the case of protein-DNA binding or via the wire's functionalization with specific receptor sites, may modify its delocalized electron distribution. This in turn should directly lead to a change in molecular conductance thus allowing its application as a sensitive bio sensor or to investigate basic molecular binding kinetics in detail and real-time.
The described heterostructure semiconductor structure serves as a basis for the fabrication of a ME device such as a triple lead system (transistor). With unparalleled precision and flexibility the electrodes distance and active area to be bridged by the conductive organic wires (conjugated organic molecules, DNA, carbon nanotubes, . . . ) can be engineered on the nm-scale. This specifically includes distances of the order of a few nanometers which are of particular importance to investigate a whole class of short (1-3 nm) organic conjugated molecules as, e.g., oligophenyls. This distance regime is not accessible by state-of-the-art lithographic techniques. By furnishing the organic wire with specific functionality (receptor molecule sub-units) the resulting hybrid structure can be employed as a sensitive detector for biomolecules or as a direct tool to study specific biomolecular interactions.
The described device base structure enables the extremely precise preparation of the contact scheme needed to employ short (few nm length) wire-like organic molecules for ME and ME based, bio-sensing applications. Ultra-narrowly spaced electrodes are inherently combined with the functionality of an embedded gate to tune the molecule conductivity by the electrostatic field effect. The high precision and reproducibility is based on a) the starting semiconductor multi layer structure which can be tailored with atomic monolayer precision, b) the (sequentially twice) single crystal cleavage of the stack which eventually forms atomically flat and sharp cleavage planes and corners, c) the selective wet etching which can exceed selectivity ratios of the order of 1:100 and d) the (sequential) deposition of smooth metal contact layers of expected surface roughness ≈11 nm.
Building on this ME concept the wire system may be further functionalized with specific receptor units for the selective capturing of biomolecules. The binding reaction is expected to change the molecules conductivity turning the hybrid device into a biosensor device.
For the basic electrode fabrication, all material heterostructures are suited which allow at the same time fabrication with monolayer thickness precision, atomically sharp cleavage along (two perpendicular) crystal directions and highest selective etching. In the following, the fabrication process is outlined for the example of a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure. In this case, the stack may comprise an undoped AlGaAs layer (thickness 300 nm), a highly n-doped (Si 1018 cm−3) GaAs layer (5 nm) and a second undoped AlGaAs layer (300 nm), all grown on top of a standard semi-insulating GaAs <100> substrate (650 μm) by MBE. For proof of principle a sample piece of a few mm2 area is cut from the grown wafer. Before any cleaving all needed large electrical contact pads (order of 100 μm) connecting to outer wiring/setup will be manufactured by means of standard resolution photolithography, etching and metallization. As sketched in
As a next step the sample is cleaved mechanically along a <110> crystallographic direction. The exact position of cleavage has to be previously defined by a short surface groove at the sample edge, well outside the supposed electrically active region. The AlGaAs/GaAs stack splits perfectly along an atomically flat plane. In the following the thin GaAs at the obtained cleavage plane is selectively wet etched against AlxGa1-xAs up to a depth of about 10 nm (reported maximum selectivity 120:1 for x=0.3 with a recipe consisting of citric acid/H2O2, Ref. G. C. DeSalvo et al., JECS 1992). Finally, the source and drain contact metallization is established by thermal or electron beam metal evaporation of about 4 nm thickness in ultra high vacuum (UHV). Here, evaporation from an angle ensures that no short circuit between the electrodes is obtained and that the highly doped GaAs film remains isolated from the metal. For the given example numbers of 5 nm GaAs and 4 nm nominal metal deposition one obtains a resulting gap width of ˜2 nm for a 45° evaporation. A suitable metal system to obtain a superior surface smoothness (≈nm) together with good adhesion properties is a Palladium-Gold (PdAu) alloy of composition 20:80.
In case of the proposed few (eventually single) molecule device preparation the heterostructure sample first has to be cleaved twice, along two perpendicular crystal directions. After selective etching two metal thin film evaporations follow, from different angular directions (see
Following the described device basis fabrication the respective organic molecule nanowires can be deposited. Examples are Dithiol-oligophenyls (terminated on both sides with thiol-groups, compare
After having assembled parallel oriented wires finally bridging and covering the whole gap, the conductance between source and drain as a function of gate-voltage will be measured. When operating the device as a biosensor under physiologic buffer solutions such as to investigate the specific binding of proteins to DNA strands the question of needed PdAu electrode passivation (against the aqueous solution) will have to be addressed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 47 679.9 | Oct 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/11221 | 10/10/2003 | WO | 1/13/2006 |