Dielectrophoretic borophene tweezer: Sub-10 mV nano-particle trapping

[Display omitted] •Design of borophene DEP tweezer based on a multiscale atom-totweezer framework.•∇|E(r)|2 growth in borophene edge is 4 orders of magnitude vs graphene counterpart.•Borophene DEP tweezer can trap sub-10 nm particles through ultralow voltages. Impressive characteristics of the recen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied surface science 2020-10, Vol.527, p.146859, Article 146859
Hauptverfasser: Ghamari, Shima, Dehdast, Mahyar, Habibiyan, Hamidreza, Pourfath, Mahdi, Ghafoorifard, Hassan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Design of borophene DEP tweezer based on a multiscale atom-totweezer framework.•∇|E(r)|2 growth in borophene edge is 4 orders of magnitude vs graphene counterpart.•Borophene DEP tweezer can trap sub-10 nm particles through ultralow voltages. Impressive characteristics of the recently synthesized metallic borophene render it a promising two-dimensional (2D) material for a multitude of applications in nanotechnology. In this work, by employing a multiscale atom-to-tweezer methodology, the operation of borophene as electrode material in a dielectrophoretic (DEP) tweezer is carefully analyzed. According to the results, the proposed borophene-based DEP tweezer significantly enhances the electric field intensity gradient by at least 4 orders of magnitude, thereby surpassing the recently proposed graphene-based DEP tweezer in both short-range and long-range operating regimes. Furthermore, it is found that borophene pushes the limit of 2D-material-based DEP trapping to record-breakingly low voltages. The proposed borophene-based DEP tweezer is predicted to be capable of trapping sub-10-nm polystyrene beads by exerting voltages as low as 20 mV and capturing the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) by applying a voltage of merely 2 mV, with nearly-100-percent spatial resolution. The results indicate that borophene-based DEP devices can realize ultimate control in the manipulation of nanoparticles.
ISSN:0169-4332
1873-5584
DOI:10.1016/j.apsusc.2020.146859