Rapid electrodeposition of Cu nanoparticle film on Ni foam as an integrated 3D free-standing electrode for non-invasive and non-enzymatic creatinine sensing.
Hongming HouYifan LiuXianglong LiWenbo LiuXiaoli GongPublished in: The Analyst (2024)
High cost, inherent destabilization, and intricate fixing of enzyme molecules are the main drawbacks of enzyme-based creatinine sensors. The design of a low-cost, stabilizable, and enzyme-free creatinine sensing probe is essential to address these limitations. In this work, an integrated three-dimensional (3D) free-standing electrode was designed to serve as a non-enzymatic creatinine sensing platform and was fabricated by rapid electrodeposition of a dense copper nanoparticle film on nickel foam (Cu NP film/NF). This low-cost, stable, easy-to-fabricate, and binder-free Cu NP film/NF electrode has abundant active sites and excellent electrochemical performance. Cyclic voltammetry measurements show a wide linear range (0.25-24 mM), low detection limit (0.17 mM), and high sensitivity (306 μA mM -1 cm -2 ). The developed sensor shows high recovery of creatinine concentration in real urine. Besides, it has better specificity, reproducibility, and robustness in detecting creatinine. These excellent results suggest that a non-enzymatic creatinine sensor based on an integrated 3D free-standing Cu NP film/NF electrode has good potential for non-invasive detection of urinary creatinine.
Keyphrases
- low cost
- uric acid
- reduced graphene oxide
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- signaling pathway
- room temperature
- lps induced
- carbon nanotubes
- metabolic syndrome
- oxidative stress
- nuclear factor
- pi k akt
- gold nanoparticles
- aqueous solution
- inflammatory response
- real time pcr
- quantum dots
- immune response
- risk assessment
- living cells
- neural network
- human health
- liquid chromatography
- structural basis