Engineering of Electron Affinity and Interfacial Charge Transfer of Graphene for Self-Powered Nonenzymatic Biosensor Applications.
Mohamed Fathi SanadVenkata S N ChavaAhmed Esmail ShalanLissette Garcia EnriquezTing ZhengSrikanth PillaSreeprasad T SreenivasanPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
Facile electron transport and intimate electronic contact at the catalyst-electrode interface are critical for the ideal performance of electrochemical devices such as glucose biofuel cells and biosensors. Here, through a comprehensive experimental-theoretical exploration, we demonstrate that engineering of interfacial properties, including interfacial electron dynamics, electron affinity, electrode-catalyst-adsorbate electrical synergy, and electrocatalytically active surface area, can lead to highly efficient graphene-based electrochemical devices. We selected two closely related but electronically and surface chemically different functionalized graphene analogues-graphene acid (GA) and reduced graphene oxide (rGO)-as the model graphenic platforms. Our studies reveal that compared to rGO, GA is a superior bifunctional catalyst with high oxygen reduction reaction (an onset potential of 0.8 V) and good glucose oxidation activities. Spectroscopic and electrochemical analysis of GA and rGO indicated that the higher carboxylic acid content on GA increases its overall electron affinity and coupled with improved conductivity and band alignment, which leads to GA's better electrochemical performance. The formulation of a heterostructure between GA and samarium oxide (Sm2O3) nanoparticles led to augmented conductivity (lower charge-transfer resistance) and glucose binding affinity, resulting in a further enhanced glucose oxidation activity. The interdimensional Sm2O3/GA heterostructure, leveraging their enhanced glucose oxidation capacity, exhibited excellent nonenzymatic amperometric glucose sensing performance, with a detection limit of 107 nM and a sensitivity of 20.8 μA/μM. Further, a nonenzymatic, membrane-free glucose biofuel cell (with Sm2O3/GA heterostructure as anode and GA as biocathode) produced a power density of 3.2 μW·cm-2 (in PBS spiked with 3 mM glucose), which can function as self-powered glucose sensors with 70 nM limit of detection. The study establishes the potential of interfacial engineering of GA to engage it as a highly tunable substrate for a broad range of electrochemical applications, especially in future self-powered biosensors.
Keyphrases
- pet ct
- reduced graphene oxide
- gold nanoparticles
- electron transfer
- ionic liquid
- highly efficient
- blood glucose
- label free
- room temperature
- molecularly imprinted
- quantum dots
- hydrogen peroxide
- visible light
- stem cells
- photodynamic therapy
- mass spectrometry
- drug delivery
- gene expression
- molecular docking
- induced apoptosis
- single cell
- transcription factor
- carbon dioxide
- metal organic framework
- dna methylation
- adipose tissue
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- insulin resistance
- bone marrow
- skeletal muscle