| Literature DB >> 26634186 |
Xiaosong Du1, Christopher J Durgan1, David J Matthews2, Joshua R Motley1, Xuebin Tan2, Kovit Pholsena1, Líney Árnadóttir1, Jessica R Castle3, Peter G Jacobs4, Robert S Cargill3, W Kenneth Ward3, John F Conley2, Gregory S Herman1.
Abstract
This study details the use of printing and other additive processes to fabricate a novel amperometric glucose sensor. The sensor was fabricated using a Au coated 12.7 μm thick polyimide substrate as a starting material, where micro-contact printing, electrochemical plating, chloridization, electrohydrodynamic jet (e-jet) printing, and spin coating were used to pattern, deposit, chloridize, print, and coat functional materials, respectively. We have found that e-jet printing was effective for the deposition and patterning of glucose oxidase inks with lateral feature sizes between ~5 to 1000 μm in width, and that the glucose oxidase was still active after printing. The thickness of the permselective layer was optimized to obtain a linear response for glucose concentrations up to 32 mM and no response to acetaminophen, a common interfering compound, was observed. The use of such thin polyimide substrates allow wrapping of the sensors around catheters with high radius of curvature ~250 μm, where additive and microfabrication methods may allow significant cost reductions.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26634186 PMCID: PMC4664458 DOI: 10.1149/2.0101504jss
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ECS J Solid State Sci Technol ISSN: 2162-8769 Impact factor: 2.070