| Literature DB >> 31824941 |
Isacco Gualandi1, Marta Tessarolo2, Federica Mariani1, Domenica Tonelli1, Beatrice Fraboni2, Erika Scavetta1.
Abstract
Potentiometric transduction is an important tool of analytical chemistry to record chemical signals, but some constraints in the miniaturization and low-cost fabrication of the reference electrode are a bottleneck in the realization of more-advanced devices such as wearable and lab-on-a-chip sensors. Here, an organic electrochemical transistor (OECT) has been designed with an alternative architecture that allows to record the potentiometric signals of gate electrodes, which have been chemically modified to obtain Ag/AgnX interfaces (X = Cl-, Br-, I-, and S2-), without the use of a reference electrode. When the OECT is immersed in a sample solution, it reaches an equilibrium state, because PEDOT:PSS exchanges charges with the electrolyte until its Fermi level is aligned to the one of Ag/AgnX. The latter is controlled by Xn- concentration in the solution. As a consequence, in this spontaneous process, the conductivity of PEDOT:PSS changes with the electrochemical potential of the modified gate electrode without any external bias. The sensor works by applying only a fixed drain current or drain voltage and thus the OECT sensor operates with just two terminals. It is also demonstrated that, in this configuration, gate potential values extracted from the drain current are in good agreement with the ones measured with respect to a reference electrode being perfectly correlated (linear slope equal to 1.00 ± 0.03). In the case of the sulfide anion, the OECT performance overcomes the limit represented by the Nernst equation, with a sensitivity of 0.52 V decade-1. The presented results suggest that OECTs could be a viable option to fabricate advanced sensors based on potentiometric transduction.Entities:
Keywords: OECT; PEDOT:PSS; chemical sensors; chloride; potentiometric sensors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31824941 PMCID: PMC6882742 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2019.00354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1(A) Conventional setup of a potentiometric measurement and corresponding electrical circuit (B). (C) Scheme of the OECT setup proposed by Wrighton's group (Kittlesen et al., 1984; Paul et al., 1985) and corresponding electrical circuit (D). (E) Scheme of OECTs that are commonly used in literature and corresponding electrical scheme (F). (G) Scheme of here-proposed OECT for potentiometric measurements and corresponding electrical scheme (H).
Figure 2(A) OECT architecture, (B) experimental setup for acquiring transfer curve (C), and output curves (D).
Figure 3Gate modification by electrosynthesis steps.
Figure 4(A) Experimental setup for the OECT used as Cl− sensor. (B) Id vs. time curve obtained for incremental Cl− additions to the electrolyte solution (Vd = −0.01 V). (C) Trend of Eg following Cl− additions.
Figure 5(A) Eg and Id vs. time curves recorded for incremental Cl− additions to the electrolyte solution (Vd = −0.01 V). (B) Plot of calculated vs. measured E-Values.
Figure 6Normalized sensitivity vs. standard potential of gate electrodes embedded in the OECT.
Figure 7(A) Vd obtained for incremental S2− additions to the electrolyte solution. (B) Sensitivity calculated in current-driven mode vs. standard potential of gate electrodes embedded in the OECT.