Researchers create method for more sensitive electrochemical sensors
Northwestern University |
Graphene
and related materials hold promise for the future of electrochemical sensors --
detectors that measure the concentration of oxygen, toxic gases, and other
substances -- but many applications require greater sensitivity at lower
detection ranges than scientists have been able to achieve. A Northwestern
University research team and partners in India have recently developed a new
method for amplifying signals in graphene oxide-based electrochemical sensors
through a process called "magneto-electrochemical immunoassay." The
findings could open up a new class of technologies with applications in
medicine, chemistry, and engineering.
Researchers from Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering
and Applied Science, the Northwestern International Institute for
Nanotechnology (IIN), the Northwestern University Atomic and Nanoscale
Characterization Experimental (NUANCE) Center, and the
Institute for Microbial Technology (IMTECH)-India, a national laboratory of
India, contributed to the research.
A paper about the work, "Enhancing Electrochemical
Detection on Graphene Oxide-CNT Nanostructured Electrodes Using
Magneto-Nanobioprobes," was published November 19 in Nature Scientific Reports.
Graphene-based
nanocomposite films have recently been used as an effective sensing platform
for the development of electrochemical sensors and biosensors because of their
unique facile surface modification characteristics and high charge mobility.
The
researchers' new concept combines the advantages carbon nanotubes and reduced graphene
oxide together with electrochemical bursting of magnetic gold nanoparticles
into a large number of metal ions.
High
sensitivity was achieved by precisely designing the nanohybrid and correlating
the available metal ions with analyte concentration. The researchers used tiny
magnetic particles encapsulated in inert coating of silicon dioxide to make
core-shell nanostructures with favorable magnetic properties of metallic iron
while preventing them from oxidation or significant degradation. They were then
coated with gold because of its chemical inertness and biocompatibility.
This
novel immune-detection platform shows potential for rapid and sensitive
screening of environmental pollutants or toxins in samples. Researchers
reported the ultrahigh sensitivity of this method for a new generation of
herbicide diuron and its analogues up to sub-picomolar concentration in
standard water samples. The process also proved to be efficient and
cost-effective: tens of thousands of screen-printed electrodes can be manufactured
quite readily with low cost for such hybrid assay.
The paper's authors included Vinayak Dravid, professor of
materials science and engineering at Northwestern, a founding member of IIN,
and director of the NUANCE Center; Gajendera Shekhawat, research
associate professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern;
Jinsong Wu, research assistant professor of materials science and engineering
at Northwestern; and lead author Priyanka Sharma, Vijayender Bhalla, E. Senthil
Prasad, and C. Raman Suri, all of the Institute of Microbial Technology, India.
The
National Science Foundation NSF-IREE, NSF-ECCS, and NSF-OISE grant supported
this work, with partial support from NIH CCNE program at Northwestern.
Source: Northwestern University
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Posted by Unknown
on Saturday, January 19, 2013.
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