Partially Oxidized Carbon Nanomaterials with Ni/NiO Heterostructures as Durable Glucose Sensors.
Jinhang XueCheng HanYuandong YangShaojie XuQipeng LiHuagui NieJinjie QianZhi YangPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2023)
Conventional enzyme-based glucose biosensors have limited extensive applications in daily life because glucose oxidase is easily inactivated and is expensive. In this paper, we propose a strategy to prepare a new type of cost-effective, efficient, and robust nonenzymatic Ni-CNT-O for electrochemical glucose sensing. It is first followed by the pyrolysis of Ni-ABDC nanostrips using melamine to grow carbon nanotubes (CNTs) to give an intermediate product of Ni-CNT , which is further accompanied by partial oxidation to enable the facile formation of hierarchical carbon nanomaterials with improved hydrophilicity. A series of physicochemical characterizations have fully proved that Ni-CNT-O is a carbon-coated heterostructure of Ni and NiO nanoparticles embedded into coordination polymer-derived porous carbons. The obtained Ni-CNT-O exhibits a better electrocatalytic activity for glucose oxidation stemming from the synergistic effect of a metal element and a metal oxide than unoxidized Ni-CNT , which also shows high performance with a wide linear range from 1 to 3000 μM. It also offers a high sensitivity of 79.4 μA mM -1 cm -2 , a low detection limit of 500 nM (S/N = 3), and a satisfactory long-term durability. Finally, this glucose sensor exhibits good reproducibility, high selectivity, as well as satisfactory results by comparing the current response of simulated serum within egg albumen.
Keyphrases
- metal organic framework
- blood glucose
- transition metal
- carbon nanotubes
- hydrogen peroxide
- adipose tissue
- type diabetes
- photodynamic therapy
- gold nanoparticles
- physical activity
- risk assessment
- reduced graphene oxide
- blood pressure
- highly efficient
- nitric oxide
- insulin resistance
- mass spectrometry
- metabolic syndrome
- sensitive detection
- molecularly imprinted
- heavy metals
- glycemic control