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Cable bacteria as long-range biological semiconductors

Authors :
Bonné, Robin
Hou, Ji-Ling
Hustings, Jeroen
Meert, Mathijs
Hidalgo-Martinez, Silvia
Cornelissen, Rob
D'Haen, Jan
Thijs, Sofie
Vangronsveld, Jaco
Valcke, Roland
Cleuren, Bart
Meysman, Filip J. R.
Manca, Jean V.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Filamentous cable bacteria exhibit unprecedented long-range biological electron transport, which takes place in a parallel fibre structure that shows an extraordinary electrical conductivity for a biological material. Still, the underlying electron transport mechanism remains undisclosed. Here we determine the intrinsic electrical properties of individual cable bacterium filaments. We retrieve an equivalent electrical circuit model, characterising cable bacteria as resistive biological wires. Temperature dependent experiments reveal that the charge transport is thermally activated, and can be described with an Arrhenius-type relation over a broad temperature range (-196{\deg}C to +50{\deg}C), thus excluding metal-like electron transport. Furthermore, when cable bacterium filaments are utilized as the channel in a field-effect transistor, they show n-type transport, indicating that electrons rather than holes are the charge carriers. Electron mobilities are in the order of 10$^{-1}$ cm$^2$/Vs, comparable to many organic semiconductors. This new type of biological centimetre-range semiconductor with low resistivity offers new perspectives for both fundamental studies and applications in (bio)electronics.<br />Comment: 19 pages, including supplementary information

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1912.06224
Document Type :
Working Paper