Search Patents
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Publication number: 20100243990Abstract: Electrical devices comprised of nanowires are described, along with methods of their manufacture and use. The nanowires can be nanotubes and nanowires. The surface of the nanowires may be selectively functionalized. Nanodetector devices are described.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 2, 2010Publication date: September 30, 2010Applicant: President and Fellows of Harvard CollegeInventors: Charles M. Lieber, Hongkun Park, Qingqiao Wei, Yi Cui, Wenjie Liang
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Patent number: 8698481Abstract: A solid state molecular sensor having an aperture extending through a thickness of a sensing region is configured with a sensing region thickness that corresponds to the characteristic extent of at least a component of a molecular species to be translocated through the aperture. A change in an electrical characteristic of the sensing region is measured during the molecular species translocation. The sensor can be configured as a field effect transistor molecular sensor. The sensing region can be a region of graphene including an aperture extending through a thickness of the graphene.Type: GrantFiled: September 12, 2008Date of Patent: April 15, 2014Assignee: President and Fellows of Harvard CollegeInventors: Charles M. Lieber, Qihua Xiong, Ping Xie, Ying Fang
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Publication number: 20100152057Abstract: The present invention generally relates to nanoscale wire devices and methods for use in determining analytes suspected to be present in a sample. The invention provides a nanoscale wire that has improved sensitivity, as the carrier concentration in the wire is controlled by an external gate voltage, such that the nanoscale wire has a Debye screening length that is greater than the average cross-sectional dimension of the nanoscale wire when the nanoscale wire is exposed to a solution suspected of containing an analyte. This Debye screening length (lambda) associated with the carrier concentration (p) inside nanoscale wire is adjusted by adjusting the gate voltage applied to an FET structure, such that the carriers in the nanoscale wire are depleted.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 19, 2007Publication date: June 17, 2010Applicant: President and Fellows of Havard CollegeInventors: Charles M. Lieber, Xuan Gao, Gengfeng Zheng
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Patent number: 8575663Abstract: The present invention generally relates, in some aspects, to nanoscale wire devices and methods for use in determining analytes suspected to be present in a sample. Certain embodiments of the invention provide a nanoscale wire that has improved sensitivity, as the carrier concentration in the wire is controlled by an external gate voltage, such that the nanoscale wire has a Debye screening length that is greater than the average cross-sectional dimension of the nanoscale wire when the nanoscale wire is exposed to a solution suspected of containing an analyte. This Debye screening length (lambda) associated with the carrier concentration (p) inside nanoscale wire is adjusted, in some cases, by adjusting the gate voltage applied to an FET structure, such that the carriers in the nanoscale wire are depleted.Type: GrantFiled: November 19, 2007Date of Patent: November 5, 2013Assignee: President and Fellows of Harvard CollegeInventors: Charles M. Lieber, Xuan Gao, Gengfeng Zheng
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Patent number: 9535063Abstract: One aspect of the invention provides a nanoscale wire that has improved sensitivity, for example, as the carrier concentration in the wire is controlled by an external gate voltage. In one set of embodiments, the nanoscale wire has a Debye screening length that is greater than the average cross-sectional dimension of the nanoscale wire when the nanoscale wire is exposed to a solution suspected of containing an analyte. In certain instances, the Debye screening length associated with the carriers inside nanoscale wire may be adjusted by adjusting the voltage, for example, a gate voltage applied to an FET structure. In some cases, the nanoscale wire can be operated under conditions where the carriers in the nanoscale wire are depleted and the nanoscale wire has a conductance that is not linearly proportional to the voltage applied to the nanoscale wire sensor device, for example, via a gate electrode.Type: GrantFiled: September 18, 2013Date of Patent: January 3, 2017Assignee: President and Fellows of Harvard CollegeInventors: Charles M. Lieber, Xuan Gao, Gengfeng Zheng
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Patent number: 10119955Abstract: A solid state molecular sensor having an aperture extending through a thickness of a sensing material is configured with a continuous electrically-conducting path extending in the sensing material around the aperture. A supply reservoir is connected to provide a molecular species, having a molecular length, from the supply reservoir to an input port of the aperture. A collection reservoir is connected to collect the molecular species from an output port of the aperture after translocation of the molecular species from the supply reservoir through the sensing aperture. The sensing aperture has a length between the input and output ports, in the sensing material, that is substantially no greater than the molecular length of the molecular species from the supply reservoir. An electrical connection to the sensing material measures a change in an electrical characteristic of the sensing material during the molecular species translocation through the aperture.Type: GrantFiled: February 21, 2014Date of Patent: November 6, 2018Assignee: President and Fellows of Harvard CollegeInventors: Charles M. Lieber, Qihua Xiong, Ping Xie, Ying Fang
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Patent number: 8232584Abstract: Various aspects of the invention relate to nanoscale wire devices and methods of use for detecting analytes. In one aspect, the invention relates to a nanoscale electrical sensor array device, comprising at least one n-doped semiconductor nanoscale wire and at least one p-doped semiconductor nanoscale wire, each having a reaction entity immobilized thereon. Binding of an analyte to the immobilized reaction entity causes a detectable change in the electrical property of the nanoscale wire. In some embodiments, the reaction entity can be a nucleic acid that may interact with other nucleic acids, proteins, etc. In a specific embodiment, the nucleic acid may interact with an enzyme such as telomerase, which can extend the nucleic acid. In other embodiments, the analyte to be detected can be a toxin, virus or small molecule. Systems and methods of using such nanoscale devices are also disclosed, for example, within a microarray.Type: GrantFiled: August 5, 2009Date of Patent: July 31, 2012Assignee: President and Fellows of Harvard CollegeInventors: Charles M. Lieber, Fernando Patolsky, Gengfeng Zheng