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      Ultrasensitive room-temperature piezoresistive transduction in graphene-based nanoelectromechanical systems.

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          Abstract

          The low mass and high quality factors that nanomechanical resonators exhibit lead to exceptional sensitivity in the frequency domain. This is especially appealing for the design of ultrasensitive force and mass sensors. The sensitivity of a nanomechanical mass and force sensor depends on its mass and quality factor; a low resonator mass and a higher quality factor reduce both the minimum resolvable mass and force. Graphene, a single atomic layer thick membrane is an ideal candidate for nanoelectromechanical resonators due to its extremely low mass and high stiffness. Here, we show that by employing the intrinsic piezoresistivity of graphene to transduce its motion in nanoelectromechanical systems, we approach a force resolution of 16.3 ± 0.8 aN/Hz(1/2) and a minimum detectable mass of 1.41 ± 0.02 zeptograms (10(-21) g) at ambient temperature. Quality factors of the driven response of the order of 10(3) at pressures ∼10(-6) Torr on several devices are also observed. Moreover, we demonstrate this at ambient temperature on chemical-vapor-deposition-grown graphene to allow for scale-up, thus demonstrating its potential for applications requiring exquisite force and mass resolution such as mass spectroscopy and magnetic resonance force microscopy.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nano Lett.
          Nano letters
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          1530-6992
          1530-6984
          Apr 08 2015
          : 15
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Materials, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PH, United Kingdom.
          Article
          10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b00129
          25723099
          5781805c-66d7-4e8d-b02c-e9042a008871
          History

          attonewton force sensitivity,Graphene NEMS,zeptogram mass sensitivity,room temperature NEMS,piezoresistive sensing

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