Issue 21, 2011

Single on-chip goldnanowires for electrochemical biosensing of glucose

Abstract

The development of glucose diagnostic devices with low detection limits is of key importance in diabetes-related research. New highly sensitive sensors are required for non-invasive detection of glucose in bodily fluids, other than blood, and an electrochemical sensor based on a single gold nanowire for rapid, reliable and quantitative detection of low glucose concentrations (10 μM–1 mM), is presented in this paper. Single gold nanowire devices are fabricated at silicon chip substrates using a hybrid electron beam – photolithography approach. Critical dimensions of the nanowires are characterised using a combination of scanning electron and atomic force microscopies. Fabricated nanowire devices are characterised by direct electrical probing and cyclic voltammetry to explore functionality. The voltammetric detection of glucose was performed using ferrocene monocarboxylic acid as an oxidising mediator in the presence of glucose oxidase. The biosensor can be applied to the quantification of glucose in the range of 10 μM–100 mM, with an extremely high sensitivity of 7.2 mA mM−1 cm−2 and a low detection limit of 3 μM (S/N = 3). The sensor demonstrated high selectivity towards glucose with negligible interference from other oxidizable species including uric acid, ascorbic acid, mannose, fructose, salicylic acid (Aspirin) and acetaminophen (Paracetamol).

Graphical abstract: Single on-chip gold nanowires for electrochemical biosensing of glucose

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Apr 2011
Accepted
23 Aug 2011
First published
12 Sep 2011

Analyst, 2011,136, 4507-4513

Single on-chip gold nanowires for electrochemical biosensing of glucose

K. Dawson, M. Baudequin and A. O'Riordan, Analyst, 2011, 136, 4507 DOI: 10.1039/C1AN15279C

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