“…Graphene has the potential for such sensitive detection and has been applied to a wide variety of detection targets over the past 15 years, starting with the earliest research studies [30,31]. Such targets range from ions [32][33][34], gases [35][36][37], organic molecules [38,39], nucleic acids [40,41], and proteins [42] to viruses [43][44][45], bacteria [30,46], and cells [47,48]. The detection mechanisms of graphene biosensors are also diverse, including those based on electrical methods, such as those using field-effect transistors (FETs) [49,50] and electrochemical techniques [51][52][53], and optical methods, such as the use of molecular beacons [54,55], chemiluminescence assays [56,57], surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy [58,59], and Raman scattering spectroscopy [58,60].…”