| Literature DB >> 32660011 |
Paloma Yáñez-Sedeño1, Susana Campuzano1, José Manuel Pingarrón1.
Abstract
Screen-printing technology has revolutionized many fields, including that of electrochemical biosensing. Due to their current relevance, this review, unlike other papers, discusses the relevant aspects of electrochemical biosensors manufactured using this technology in connection to both paper substrates and wearable formats. The main trends, advances, and opportunities provided by these types of devices, with particular attention to the environmental and biomedical fields, are addressed along with illustrative fundamentals and applications of selected representative approaches from the recent literature. The main challenges and future directions to tackle in this research area are also pointed out.Entities:
Keywords: clinical analysis; electrochemical (bio)sensing; environmental monitoring; paper; screen-printed; wearable
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32660011 PMCID: PMC7400178 DOI: 10.3390/bios10070076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Screen-printed paper electrochemical (bio)sensors for environmental applications.
| Configuration | Technique and Method | Detection | Analyte/Sample | Analytical Characteristics | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Origami gas-sensing paper-based with CuNPs/SPGE | Gas absorption and electrocatalytic oxidation of NO2 reduced form in the presence of CuNPs | DPV (nitrite) | NOx/air, exhaust gases from cars | 0.03 vppm | [ |
| Origami paper based multiple biosensor with BChE, AP or Tyr | Detection of TCh, 1-naphthol or 1,2-benzoquinone | Differential amperometry | paraoxon, 2,4-DCPA, atrazine | L.R: 2–100 ppb | [ |
| PANI/G/PEO/p(VB-co-VA-co-VAc) on cellulosic paper | Conductive paper with printed sensor patterns | Resistance changes | nerve gas (DMMP) | L.R.: 3–30,000 ppb | [ |
| ChOx/PB/CBNPs/office paper SPE | Inhibition of ChOx activity | Amperometry (H2O2) | Sulphur mustard (Yprite) | L.R: 1–4 mM | [ |
| Microfluidic device with chromatographic paper/CE | BQ mediated | Amperometry (HQ) | pesticides/soils, vegetables | LOD: 37.5 μg g−1 | [ |
| G/AuNPs/mixed cellulose ester filter paper | Direct electrochemical oxidation | DPV (NO2−) | nitrite/waters | L.R: 0.3–720 μM | [ |
| CNTs/Chit/SDS/cellulosic paper with electrodeposited Bi | Anodic stripping previous accumulation at −1.2 V for 240 s | SWASV | Pb2+/waters | L.R: 10–200 ppb | [ |
| G/CNTs/ionic liquid/cellulosic paper with electroplated Bi | Anodic stripping previous accumulation at −1.3 V for 300 s | SWASV | Cd2+, Pb2+/wood | L.R: 1–50 μg L−1 | [ |
| [PMo11VO40]5−/Whatman #4 filter paper/SPE | Direct electrochemical reduction | CV | ClO3−/soil | L.R: 0.312–2.5 mg mL−1 | [ |
| CB/Prussian Blue paper-based SPE | Reagent-free nitrocellulose membrane with enzyme substrate BTCh | Differential amperometry | nerve agents (paraoxon) | L.R: up to 25 μg L−1 | [ |
| CNFs or rGO/AuNPs | Whatman Grade 1 cellulose paper modified by ink (bottom side) and nanomaterials (upper side) | LSV after preconcentration at +0.2 V vs Ag for 600 s | Hg(II)/river waters | L.R: up to 1.2 μM | [ |
| SiNs/paper/rGO/SPCE | Paper-based immunocapture assay with anti-EE2 | SWV | EE2/ waters | L.R: 0.5–120 ng L−1 | [ |
| carbon black ink/filter paper SPE | Direct electrochemical oxidation | SWV | BPA/waters | L.R: 0.1–0.9; 1–50 μM | [ |
AP: alkaline phosphatase; BChE: butyrylcholinesterase, CB: carbon black; Chit: chitosan; CFU: colony forming unit; ChOx: choline oxidase; CNF: carbon nanofibers; DCPA: 2,4-dichloro-phenoxyacetic acid; DMMP: dimethyl methylphosphomate; E. coli: Escherichia coli; EE2: ethinyl estradiol; EIS: electrochemical impedance spectroscopy; G: graphene; HQ: hydroquinone; LOD: limit of detection; L.R: linear range; CNTs: carbon nanotubes; PANI, polyaniline; PB, Prussian Blue; PEO, polyethylene oxide; p(VB-co-VA-co-VAc): poly(vinylbutyral-co-vinyl alcohol-co-vinyl acetate); rGO: reduced graphene oxide; SPE: screen-printed electrode; SPGE: screen-printed gold electrode; SDS: sodium docecylsulfate; SiNs: silica nanoparticles; SWASV: square-wave anodic stripping voltammetry.
Screen-printed paper electrochemical (bio)sensors for clinical applications.
| Configuration | Technique and Method | Detection | Analyte/Sample | AnalyticalCharacteristics | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fe(CN)63−/banana peel tissue/SN-MPTS/paper | L-Tyr oxidation catalyzed by tyrosinase and mediated by Fe(CN)63− | DPV | L-Tyr/plasma | L.R: 0.05–600 μM | [ |
| MWCNTs/THI/AuNPs/SPE | Label-free microfluidic paper based immunosensor with immobilized anti-E2 | DPV (THI) | 17β-estradiol | L.R: 0.01–100 ng mL−1 | [ |
| (NH2-G)/THI/AuNPs/SPE | Label-free microfluidic paper based immunosensor with immobilized anti-BNP | Amperometry | BNP/serum | L.R: 0.05–30 ng mL−1 | [ |
| rGO/THI/AuNPs/SPE | Label-free microfluidic paper based immunosensor with immobilized anti-FSH | DPV (THI) | FSH/serum | L.R: 1–100 mIU mL−1 | [ |
| rGO-TEPA/AuNPs/SPE | Microfluidic paper-based immunosensor with immobilized anti-AFP; | SWV (H2O2/OPD) | AFP/serum | L.R: 0.01–100 ng mL−1 | [ |
| L-Cys-AuNPs/G/SPE | Label-free origami paper based immunosensor with immobilized anti-CRP | EIS (Fe(CN)63−/4−) | CRP/serum | L.R: 50–105 ng mL−1 | [ |
| Q-MA/SPGE | Label-free microfluidic paper based immunosensor with immobilized anti-CEA | DPV | CEA/serum | L.R: 1–100 ng mL−1 | [ |
| DPA/Ag/G/SPCE | Microfluidic plastic-paper based immunosensor with immobilized anti-AFP | EIS | AFP | L.R: 1–104 ng mL−1 | [ |
| OPANI/G/SPE | Label-free microfluidic paper based immunosensor with immobilized anti-IFN-γ | EIS (Fe(CN)63−/4−) | IFN-γ/serum | L.R: 5–103 pg mL−1 | [ |
| rGO/THI/AuNPs | Label-free microfluidic paper based immunosensor with immobilized anti-CA125 | DPV (THI) | CA125/serum | L.R: 0.1–200 U mL−1 | [ |
| cMWCNTs/cellulose paper/SPE | Label-free paper based immunosensor with immobilized anti-cTnI | EIS (Fe(CN)63−/4−) | cTnI/serum | L.R: 0.05–50 ng mL−1 | [ |
| Fe3O4@AuNPs@SiO2 MIP /Whatman paper/CPE | 3D-ePAD Direct oxidation | LSV | serotonin/capsules, urine | L.R: 0.01–1,000 mM | [ |
| C/Ag/paper/SPE | Label-free detection, current decrease | SWV | 3-nitrotyrosine | L.R: 500 nM–1 mM | [ |
| Patterned waxed paper screen-printed with silver ink | Electrochemical oxidation in the presence of silver | CV | chloride/serum, sweat | L.R: up to 200 mM | [ |
| Prussian Blue/paper/SPEs | Differential current measurements | amperometry | H2O2/simulated exhaled breath | L.R: 5–320 μM | [ |
| Prussian Blue/C black/wax patterned wax filter paper | Thiol-disulfide exchange reaction | Amperometry +0.3 V | glutathione | L.R: up to 10 mM | [ |
| CoPc/G/IL/paper/SPCE | Non-enzymatic detection | Amperometry +0.7 V | glucose/serum, honey, wine | L.R: 0.01–1.3–5.0 mM | [ |
| AuNPs/porous paper/SPE | Non-enzymatic detection | CV | glucose | L.R: 0.01–5 mM | [ |
| ATCh/G/Ag/AgCl ink/wax printing paper | ATCh hydrolysis by AChE giving TCh directly oxidized | Amperometry/TCh | AChE | L.R: 0.1–15 U mL−1 | [ |
| PheDH/paper/ERGO/SPCE | Phe hydrolysis by PheDH in the presence of NAD+ | Amperometry/NADH | Phe/neonatal blood | L.R: 1–600 μM | [ |
| paper-based wax printing/CB/SPCE | BTCh as substrate of BChE | Amperometry/TCh/PB | BChE activity/serum | L.R: up to 12 IU /mL | [ |
| MBs/paper microfluidic/SPCE | On-chip single-step magneto-immunoassay with cAb-MBs and poly-HRP-biotin-dAb | Amperometry/H2O2/TMB | MMP-9/plasma | L.R: 0.03–2 ng mL−1 | [ |
| AQ-PNA/G-PANI/paper/SPCE | PNA-DNA duplexes obstruct electron transfer from AQ label | SWV/AQ | HPV/DNA from SiHa cell line | L.R: 10–200 nM | [ |
| MB-tagged TFO/AuNPs/paper/SPCE | filter and copy papers compared for detection of ssDNA or dsDNA | SWV/MB | HIV/serum | L.R: 3–3,000 nM | [ |
| CuO/IL/ERGO/SPCE/PAD | CuO/IL delivered from a HP D300 digital dispenser | Amperometry | Creatinine/human serum | L.R: 0.01–2.0 μM | [ |
| GOx-rGO-TEPA/PB-paper/SPE | 3D paper-based microfluidic SPE | Amperometry H2O2/PB | Glucose/human sweat, blood | L.R: 0.1–25 mM | [ |
| rGO/AuNPs-paper-SPE | Wax-patterning on filter paper Whatman No1; rGO prepared from GO and dopamine | SWV | uric acid/urine | L.R: 2.5–1,000 μM | [ |
| Wax printed amino-functional graphene (NG)/THI/AuNPs and PB/PEDOT/AuNPs/SPE PADs | Label-free aptasensors | DPV | CEA, NSE/serum | L.R: 0.01–500 ng mL−1 (CEA); | [ |
| Wax screen printing patterns on cellulose paper/Nafion/Chit/GOx/PB/SPE | 3D paper-based microfluidic SPE | Amperometry H2O2/PB | glucose/sweat | L.R.: up to 1.9 mM | [ |
ATCh: acetylthiocholine chloride; AF: alpha-fetoprotein; AP: alkaline phosphatase; AQ-PNA:anthraquinone-labeled pyrrolidinyl peptide nucleic acid; AuNPs: gold nanoparticles; BChE: butyrylcholinesterase, BNP: B-type natriuretic peptide; BTCh: butyrylthiocholine; cAb: capture antibody; CB: carbon black; CEA: carcinoembryonic antigen; Chit: chitosan; CNFs: carbon nanofibers; CoPc: cobalt phthalocyanine; CRP: C-reactive protein; dAb: detector antibody; DCPA: 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid; DPA: diphenylalanine; EIS: electrochemical impedance spectroscopy; ERGO: elecrochemically reduced graphene oxide; FSH: follicle stimulating hormone; G: graphene; GNR: gold nanorods; HIV: human immunodeficiency virus HPV: human papillomavirus; HRP: horseradish peroxidase; IL: ionic liquid; MAQ: mercapto-amine quinone-functionalized receptor; MB: methylene blue; MWCNT: multi-walled carbon nanotubes; NSE: neuronspecific enolase; OPD: o-phenylenediamine; PANI: polyaniline; PB: Prussian Blue; Phe: phenylalanine; Q: quinone; Q-MA: quinone-based mercapto amine; rGO: reduced graphene oxide; SN-MPTS: 3-mercaptopropyl trimethoxysilane functionalized silica nanoparticles; SPE: screen-printed electrode; SPGE: screen-printed gold electrode; TCh: thiocholine; TEPA: tetraethylene pentamine; TFO: triple forming oligonucleotides; THI: thionine; TMB: tetramethylbenzidine.
Figure 1Fabrication process of conductive paper containing sensor patterns for dimethyl methylphosphonate (DMMP) based on poly(aniline) (PANI)/graphene composite. Reproduced and adapted with permission of American Chemical Society [15].
Figure 2(A) Schematics of fabrication steps and (B) computer-aided design (CAD) drawing of the disposable cellulose paper-based electrochemical sensor for on-site testing of H2O2 in exhaled breath with poly-methylmethacrylate (PMMA) carrier. (C) Model of a filter extension for respiratory mask. (D) Image of respiratory mask with the commercial filter extension with customized sidewalls, containing the sensor chip. Reproduced and adapted with permission of American Chemical Society [29].
Figure 3(A) Synthesis of Fe3O4@Au@SiO2-MIP, (B) preparation of the sensor for serotonin, and (C) electrochemical detection using the 3D-ePAD. Reproduced and adapted with permission of Elsevier [30].
Figure 4(A) Preparation of thiol-terminated poly(2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine) (PMPC-SH)-AuNPs/SPCE. (B–F) Steps for preparation of the PMPC-SH-AuNPs/SPCE/PAD sensor for the differential pulse voltammetry (DPV) determination of C-reactive protein (CRP). Reproduced and adapted with permission of Springer [31].
Figure 5Schematic displays of the modification and assay procedure for the implementation of an immunosensor for the determination of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) using paper-based microfluidic channels to integrate sampling, detection and adsorption zones, and a reduced graphene oxide (rGO)-tetraethylene pentamine (TEPA)/AuNPs nanocomposite for immobilization of specific AFP antibodies. Reproduced with permission of Elsevier [35].
Figure 6Schemes of (A) Ferrocene-labeled DNA (Fc-DNA) immobilization on paper and CNTs-SPEs, and (B) miRNA assay for the recognition of miR-21 (left), and the electrochemical response to the released DNAzymes (right). Reproduced and adapted with permission of American Chemical Society [38].
Wearable and flexible printed electrodes reported during 2018–2020 for biosensing applications.
| Type of Wearable Sensor | Methodology | Analyte | Detection Technique | LOD | Application, Samples and Assay Time | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flexible, wearable lactate sweat sensor | Biosensors using LOx and TTF | Lactate | Chrono-amperometry | — | Detection in artificial sweat | [ |
| Bendable bandage and microneedle based sensors | In the presence of the surface TYR biomarker, its catechol substrate, immobilized on the transducer surface is rapidly converted to benzoquinone | TYR (Melanome biomarker) | Chono-amperometry | — | Melanoma screening in skin and tissues/Tyr-containing agarose phantom gel and porcine skin in less than 4 min (2 min of incubation and 100 s for the measurement) | [ |
| Tattoo-like flexible iontophoretic platform integrated with electrochemical biosensors | Parallel operation of reverse iontophoretic ISF extraction across the skin and iontophoretic delivery of the sweat-inducing pilocarpine into the skin at separate locations and GOx and AOx-based biosensors | Glucose and alcohol | Chrono-amperometry | — | Simultaneous and real-time determination of alcohol and glucose levels on demand localized sampled sweat and ISF biofluids | [ |
| Flexible epidermal tattoo and textile-based electrochemical biosensors | OPH-based skin- and textile-worn biosensors for continuous vapor-phase detection of OP threats integrated with a soft, flexible, skin-conforming electronic interface | Vapor-phase detection of OP nerve agents. | SWV | 12 mg L−1 in terms of OP air density | Continuous and real-time vapor-phase detection of MPOx | [ |
| Tattoo paper biosensor | Epidermal OPH–pH biosensor printed onto a temporary tattoo paper coated with PANi (for monitoring the proton release during the enzymatic hydrolysis of DFP by OPH) and with a PVA-acrylamide hydrogel which ensures surface distribution of the target DFP vapors | DFP in both liquid and vapor phases | Potentiometry | — | Real-time detection of DFP in both liquid and vapor phases | [ |
| Eyeglasses platform for biosensing in tears | Enclosing the electrochemical biosensor within a microfluidic chamber, with the supporting electronics embedded onto the eyeglasses’ inner frame | Ethanol, glucose and multiple vitamins (B2, C and B6) | Chronoamperometry (ethanol and glucose) SWV (vitamins) | — | Real-time detection of alcohol intake and glucose and vitamins in human subjects | [ |
| Ring-based dual sensing platform | Wireless electronic board embedded into a ring platform, along with a printed dual-sensor electrode cap comprising a voltammetric THC sensor based on a MWCNTs/carbon electrode and an amperometric alcohol biosensor based on a Prussian-blue transducer, coated with | THC and ethanol | SWV (THC) and chrono-amperometry (ethanol) | THC: 0.5 μM; | Simultaneous detection of THC and ethanol in undiluted saliva sample within 3 min | [ |
| Finger devices printed on the robotic glove | Robotic assisted automated taste sweetness, sourness, and spiciness discrimination in food samples | Glucose, ascorbic acid, and capsaicin. | Chrono-amperometry (ethanol and glucose) SWV (vitamins) | — | Ascorbic acid in orange juice, cola, lemon juice, sports drink, and pineapple juice; Glucose in: apple cider, sugar-free sports drink, cola, sugar-free energy drink, and apple juice; Capsaicin in: green chili extract, coffee, red paprika extract, watermelon juice and red pepper extract | [ |
| Flexible printable tattoo electrodes | Flexible AAOx enzymatic biosensing tattoo patch fabricated on a polyurethane substrate and combined with a localized iontophoretic sweat stimulation system | Ascorbic acid | Chronoamperometry (Oxygen cosustrate depletion) | — | Sweat from subjects taking varying amounts of commercial vitamin C pills or vitamin C-rich beverages | [ |
AAOx: ascorbate oxidase; AOx: alcohol oxidase; GOx: glucose oxidase; DFP: diisopropyl fluorophosphate; ISF: skin interstitial fluid; LOx: lactate oxidase; MPOx: methyl paraoxon; MWCNTs: multi-walled carbon nanotubes; OP: organophosphorus; OPH: organophosphorus hydrolase; PANi: polyaniline; PVA: polyvinyl alcohol; SWV: square wave voltammetry; TTF: tetrathiafulvalene; THC: D9-tetrahydrocannabinol; Tyr: tyrosinase.
Figure 7SPEs printed on flower (a), skull (b), panda bear (c), and marijuana (d) shapes. SPEs fabricated on a temporary tattoo (e), bendable bandage (f), textile substrate (g), glove (h), water-soluble silk thin-film substrates (transferred to tooth enamel) (i), contact lens (j), or incorporated in a mouthguard (k), eyeglasess (l) or ring (m). Reprinted and adapted with permission of Springer [68] (e,j,k) Wiley [81] (f), Elsevier [82] (a,g), Elsevier [82](b), Wiley [83] (c), Wiley [65] (h), Nature Research [84] (i), Elsevier [85] (l), and Elsevier [86] (c,m).
Figure 8TYR biosensing using a bandage electrochemical sensor modified with a CAT-containing agarose gel and involving wireless chronoamperometric data transmission to a smart device (a). Chronoamperometric responses provided by the bandage sensors before (black line) and after (red line) 2 min interaction with skin pork samples untreated (1) and treated with 0.5 (2), and 2.5 mg mL−1 TYR (3) (b). Reprinted and adapted with permission of Wiley [81].
Figure 9Wearable iontophoretic biosensing device developed on a printed tattoo platform for simultaneous glucose and alcohol monitoring in interstitial fluid (ISF) and sweat, respectively, and wireless real-time transmission of the recorded response (a). Schematic display of the iontophoretic operation to simultaneously induce generation of alcohol-containing sweat by iontophoretic delivery of pilocarpine at the anode and sampling of ISF glucose at the cathode by reverse iontophoretic (b); biosensing operations to detect amperometrically alcohol in the stimulated sweat and of glucose in the extracted ISF by measuring the hydrogen peroxide generated in the AOx and GOx enzymatic reactions (c). Reprinted and adapted with permission of Wiley [83].
Figure 10Epidermal tattoo organophosphorus hydrolase (OPH)-based biosensor for vapor-phase detection of OP through SWV measurements of the p-nitrophenol generated after interaction of the MPOx micro-droplets released from the nebulizer with the OPH layer (a). Pictures of the OPH based epidermal tattoo (up) and textile (down) biosensors integrated with the flexible electronic interface and SWV responses they provide upon spraying 0 (i), 5 (ii), 10 (iii), and 15 (iv) mM MPOx in the vapor phase (b). Reprinted and adapted with permission of Elsevier [82].
Figure 11Schematic cartoon of the fluidic device, wireless electronics integrated into the eyeglasses platform, enzymatic detections of alcohol and glucose by chronoamperometry and non-enzymatic determination of vitamins by SWV in collected tears (a). Ring-based sensor platform embedded with marijuana designed sensor for detecting THC and alcohol in undiluted saliva samples using SWV and chronoamperometry (b). Reprinted and adapted with permission of Elsevier [85] (a) and [86] (b).
Figure 12Automated taste discrimination in food samples through chemical sensing at the robot fingertips (a) Prototype of the screen-printed robotic sense fingers (carbon-printed sour-finger in green, GOx PB-printed sweet-finger in blue and carbon-printed spicy-finger in red) with long connections to the electronic interface (b). Images and corresponding electrochemical responses (in red) of: robotic sour-finger dipped in orange juice and the square wave voltammetry (SWV) signature of ascorbic acid (i), robotic sweet-finger in cherry juice and amperometry data of glucose (ii), spicy-finger on green-pepper, and SWV feedback response to the presence of capsaicin (iii). For comparison purposes the response obtained in phosphate buffer saline (PBS) response are displayed in black dotted lines (c). Reprinted and adapted with permission of American Chemical Society [72].