The possibility to print electronics by means of office tools has remarkedly increased the possibility to design affordable and robust point-of-care/need devices. However, conductive inks suffer from low electrochemical and rheological performances limiting their applicability in biosensors. Herein, a fast CO2 laser approach to activate printed carbon inks towards direct enzymatic bioelectrocatalysis (3rd generation) is proposed and exploited to build biosensors for D-fructose analysis in biological fluids. The CO2 laser treatment was compared with two lab-grade printed transducers fabricated with solvent (SB) and water (WB) based carbon inks. The use of the laser revealed significant morpho-chemical variations on the printed inks and was investigated towards enzymatic direct catalysis, using Fructose dehydrogenase (FDH) integrated into entirely lab-produced biosensors. The laser-driven activation of the inks unveils the inks' direct electron transfer (DET) ability between FDH and the electrode surface. Sub-micromolar limits of detection (SBink LOD = 0.47 mu M; WB-ink LOD = 0.24 mu M) and good linear ranges (SB-ink: 5-100 mu M; WB-ink: 1-50 mu M) were obtained, together with high selectivity due to use of the enzyme and the low applied overpotential (0.15 V vs. pseudo-Ag/AgCl). The laser-activated biosensors were successfully used for D-fructose determination in complex synthetic and real biological fluids (recoveries: 93-112%; RSD <= 8.0%, n = 3); in addition, the biosensor ability for continuous measurement (1.5h) was also demonstrated simulating physiological D-fructose fluctuations in cerebrospinal fluid.
Exploiting CO2 laser to boost graphite inks electron transfer for fructose biosensing in biological fluids
Bollella, Paolo;Ferraro, Giovanni;Torsi, Luisa;
2024-01-01
Abstract
The possibility to print electronics by means of office tools has remarkedly increased the possibility to design affordable and robust point-of-care/need devices. However, conductive inks suffer from low electrochemical and rheological performances limiting their applicability in biosensors. Herein, a fast CO2 laser approach to activate printed carbon inks towards direct enzymatic bioelectrocatalysis (3rd generation) is proposed and exploited to build biosensors for D-fructose analysis in biological fluids. The CO2 laser treatment was compared with two lab-grade printed transducers fabricated with solvent (SB) and water (WB) based carbon inks. The use of the laser revealed significant morpho-chemical variations on the printed inks and was investigated towards enzymatic direct catalysis, using Fructose dehydrogenase (FDH) integrated into entirely lab-produced biosensors. The laser-driven activation of the inks unveils the inks' direct electron transfer (DET) ability between FDH and the electrode surface. Sub-micromolar limits of detection (SBink LOD = 0.47 mu M; WB-ink LOD = 0.24 mu M) and good linear ranges (SB-ink: 5-100 mu M; WB-ink: 1-50 mu M) were obtained, together with high selectivity due to use of the enzyme and the low applied overpotential (0.15 V vs. pseudo-Ag/AgCl). The laser-activated biosensors were successfully used for D-fructose determination in complex synthetic and real biological fluids (recoveries: 93-112%; RSD <= 8.0%, n = 3); in addition, the biosensor ability for continuous measurement (1.5h) was also demonstrated simulating physiological D-fructose fluctuations in cerebrospinal fluid.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.