| Literature DB >> 33166803 |
Ausra Baradoke1, Adriano Santos2, Paulo R Bueno3, Jason J Davis4.
Abstract
In this work we demonstrate that an impedance derived capacitance method is able to cleanly resolve the resonant conductance characteristics of an electrode-confined polymer film. In decorating the film with receptors, this conductance is thereafter modulated by the capturing of specific targets, demonstrated herein with C-reactive protein. This entirely reagentless and single step marker quantification is relevant to the drive of moving assays to a scaleable format requiring minimal user intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Biosensors; C-reactive protein; Molecular scale conductance; Point-of-care; Reagentless
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33166803 PMCID: PMC7581358 DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2020.112705
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosens Bioelectron ISSN: 0956-5663 Impact factor: 10.618
Fig. 1For a charged electrode-modified electroactive film immersed in a supporting electrolyte (a) the electrochemical features of the interface can be modelled by an equivalent circuit comprising solution resistance connected in series with a parallel combination of the and in series with (b). A typical impedance response is shown in (c), which can be usefully transformed into the capacitance domain (d). can be obtained at high frequencies (), as shown in (c) can be then estimated by the diameter of the semicircle. (e) Bode plot for the imaginary part of the capacitance as the function of frequency. The peak frequency can be used to estimate .
Fig. 2(a) Real and (b) Imaginary components of complex capacitance vs. frequency (Bode plots) after sensor exposure to CRP in 1% fetal bovine serum. Frequency peak () used for G calculation is shown in (b). (c) The film conductance responses on exposure to different target concentrations. (d) A representative calibration curve derived from (c) with R2 = 0.994. Error bars represent standard deviation from independent measurements.