Towards graphene biosensors

The illustration shows how maleimide compounds bind to the graphene surface. The graphene monolayer lies on a thin film of silicon nitride (red) that in turn is on a quartz microbalance (blue) and can be subjected to a potential via a gold contact (yellow).<br /><br />Illustration: Marc Gluba/HZB

The illustration shows how maleimide compounds bind to the graphene surface. The graphene monolayer lies on a thin film of silicon nitride (red) that in turn is on a quartz microbalance (blue) and can be subjected to a potential via a gold contact (yellow).

Illustration: Marc Gluba/HZB

For the first time, a team of scientists has succeeded in precisely measuring and controlling the thickness of an organic compound that has been bound to a graphene layer. This might enable graphene to be used as a sensitive detector for biological molecules in the future.

Pure carbon occurs in many forms. Besides the classical configurations found in diamonds, graphite, and coal, there are other younger exotic cousins such as graphene. Its structure resembles a honeycomb – a hexagonal mesh with a carbon atom at every corner – that is only a single atomic layer thick. Hence, it is essentially two-dimensional. As a result, graphene is extremely conductive, completely transparent, and quite resilient both chemically and mechanically.

Graphene is not very selective

It has long been known that graphene is also fundamentally suited to detecting traces of organic molecules. This is because the electrical conductivity of graphene drops as soon as foreign molecules bind to it. The problem, though, is that this happens with almost every molecule. Graphene is not very selective, which makes it very difficult to differentiate molecules. Therefore, it cannot be used as a sensor.

Now, mounting brackets for detector molecules attached

Now a team from the HZB Institute for Silicon Photovoltaics has found a way to increase the selectivity. They were successful in electrochemically activating graphene and preparing it to host molecules that act as selective binding sites. To accomplish this, para-maleimidophenyl groups from an organic solution were grafted to the surface of the graphene. These organic molecules behave like mounting brackets to which the selective detector molecules can be attached in the next step. “Thanks to these molecules, the graphene can now be employed for detecting various substances similar to how a key fits a lock”, explains Dr. Marc Gluba. The “lock” molecules on the surface are highly selective and only absorb the matching “key” molecules.

Large graphene surfaces at HZB

Other research groups had also carried out experiments along these lines. However, they only had tiny graphene flakes with diameters in the microns available to them, so that edge effects predominated. Meanwhile, physicists and chemists at HZB produced graphene surfaces several square centimeters in size so that edge effects play hardly any role in comparison to the surface processes. Then, they transferred the graphene layer to a quartz crystal microbalance. Any increase in mass alters the oscillatory frequency of the quartz crystal that even small amounts right down to individual molecular layers can be measured.

Precise detection and control

“For the first time, we were able to precisely and accurately detect how many molecules actually were grafted to the surface of the graphene”, reports junior researcher Felix Rösicke, who investigated this problem for his doctoral dissertation. “In addition, we can precisely control how many molecules bind to the graphene by adjusting an applied voltage”, explains Dr. Jörg Rappich from the HZB Institute for Silicon Photovoltaics, Rösicke’s advisor.

“The hopes we have for graphene are really enormous”, says Prof. Norbert Nickel, head of the research team. For example, one thing you could imagine would be a really inexpensive "lab-on-a-chip” – you would apply a single drop of blood and immediately obtain data for important
medical diagnostics.

Note: Felix Rösicke is completing his doctoral dissertation in the School of Analytical Sciences Adlerhof (SALSA) at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and at HZB.

Publication:
Quantifying the electrochemical maleimidation of large area graphene
F. Rösicke, M.A. Gluba, K. Hinrichs, Guoguang Sun, N.H. Nickel, J. Rappich
doi:10.1016/j.elecom.2015.05.010

arö

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • Spintronics at BESSY II: Real-time analysis of magnetic bilayer systems
    Science Highlight
    29.04.2026
    Spintronics at BESSY II: Real-time analysis of magnetic bilayer systems
    Spintronic devices enable data processing with significantly lower energy consumption. They are based on the interaction between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic layers. Now, a team from Freie Universität Berlin, HZB and Uppsala University has succeeded in tracking, for each layer separately, how the magnetic order changes after a short laser pulse has excited the system. They were also able to identify the main cause of the loss of antiferromagnetic order in the oxide layer: the excitation is transported from the hot electrons in the ferromagnetic metal to the spins in the antiferromagnet.
  • Electrocatalysts: New model for charge separation at the solid-liquid interface
    Science Highlight
    16.04.2026
    Electrocatalysts: New model for charge separation at the solid-liquid interface
    Hydrogen is at the heart of the transition to carbon neutrality, as both an energy carrier and a reagent for green chemistry. However, large-scale production of hydrogen via electrolysis, as well as the production of many other chemical products, requires significantly cheaper and more efficient catalysts. A precise understanding of the electrochemical processes that take place at the interface between the solid catalyst and the liquid medium is highly useful for developing better electrocatalysts. In the journal Nature Communications, an European team has now presented a powerful model that determines charge separation at the interface, the formation of the electric double layer and local electric potential variations, and the resulting influence on the catalytic activity.
  • Environmental Chemistry at BESSY II: Radicals in waterways
    Science Highlight
    09.04.2026
    Environmental Chemistry at BESSY II: Radicals in waterways
    How do radicals form in aqueous solutions when exposed to UV light? This question is important for health research and environmental protection, for example with regard to the overfertilisation of water bodies by intensive agriculture. A team at BESSY II has now developed a new method of investigating hydroxyl radicals in solution. By using a clever trick, the scientists gained surprising insights into the reaction pathway.