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3D-Printed Transducers for Solid Contact Potentiometric Ion Sensors: Improving Reproducibility by Fabrication Automation.

Daniel RojasDario TorricelliMaría CuarteroGastón A Crespo
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
3D printing technology has become attractive in the development of electrochemical sensors as it offers automation in fabrication, customization on-demand, and reproducibility, among other features. Nonetheless, to date, solid contact potentiometric ion sensors have remained overlooked using this technology. Thus, the novelty of this work relies on demonstrating for the first time the usefulness of the multimaterial 3D printing approach to manufacture potentiometric ion-selective electrodes. The significance is indeed twofold. First, we discovered that by using the polyethylene terephthalate glycol (PETg) and polylactic acid-carbon black (PLA-CB) filaments together with a rational electrode design containing a well to accommodate the ion-selective membrane, a tight seal among all of the sensing materials is obtained. Importantly, this has mainly impacted the electrode-to-electrode reproducibility ( E RSD 0 ± 3 mV). Second, 75 ready-to-use electrodes can be printed in less than 3.5 h in a completely automated manner at a cost of ∼0.32 €/sensor. This feature may positively impact the suitability of further scaled-up production as well as the possibility of application in low-resource contexts. Overall, the presented outcomes are expected to encourage certain research directions to adopt using multimaterial 3D-printing approaches for producing highly reproducible solid contact potentiometric ion-selective electrodes, but are not restricted to them.
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