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Electrochemical assisted enhanced nanozymatic activity of functionalized borophene for H 2 O 2 and tetracycline detection.

Syed Rahin AhmedMasoomeh SherazeePoushali DasMd ShalauddinShamima AkhterWan Jeffrey BasirunSeshasai SrinivasanAmin Reza Rajabzadeh
Published in: Biosensors & bioelectronics (2023)
This study unveils the electrochemically-enhanced nanozymatic activity exhibited by borophene during the reaction of 3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) and H 2 O 2 . Herein, the surface of the pristine borophene was first modified with the addition of thiocyanate groups to improve hydroxyl radical (•OH) scavenging activity. Then, the oxidation reaction of TMB was accelerated under applied electrochemical potential. Both factors significantly improved the detection limit and drastically decreased the detection time. DPPH testing revealed that the radical scavenging nature of borophene was more than 70%, boosting its catalytic activity. In the presence of H 2 O 2 , borophene catalyzed the oxidation of TMB and produced a blue-colored solution that was linearly correlated with the concentration of H 2 O 2 and allowed for the detection of H 2 O 2 up to 38 nM. The present finding was further extended to nanozymatic detection of tetracyclines (TCs) using a target-specific aptamer, and the results were colorimetrically quantifiable up to 1 μM with a LOD value of 150 nM. Moreover, transferring the principles of the discussed detection method to form a portable and disposable paper-based system enabled the quantification of TCs up to 0.2 μM. All the sensing experiments in this study indicate that the nanozymatic activity of borophene has significantly improved under electrochemical potential compared to conventional nanozyme-based colorimetric detection. Hence, the present discovery of electrochemically-enhanced nanozymatic activity would be promising for various sensitive and time-dependent colorimetric sensor development initiatives in the future.
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