Abstract
A solid-state reference electrode has been fabricated. Its design is based on a field effect transistor, the gate of which is coated with two kinds of polymeric films in a Bilayer state: the inner layer is an electroactive electropolymerized poly(p, p′ biphenol) film and the outer one is a polyimide film. The electrode characteristics have been examined. The bilayer film-coated reference field effect transistors (RFETs) thus fabricated were
insensitive to electrolyte ions (including H+ and OH-) under the condition of a constant concentration (e.g., 0.1M) of an electrolyte; thus they could function as a reference electrode. These RFETs showed insensitivity to O2 and less sensitivity to CO2 (compared with the RFET coated with the polyimide film alone), long-term stability and little drift. The results demonstrate that the bilayer film-coated FETs are promising as a solid-state reference electrode coupled with conventional ion-sensitive field effect transistors in a biological system.