| Literature DB >> 33916680 |
Enza Fazio1, Salvatore Spadaro1, Carmelo Corsaro1, Giulia Neri2, Salvatore Gianluca Leonardi3, Fortunato Neri1, Nehru Lavanya4, Chinnathambi Sekar4, Nicola Donato5, Giovanni Neri5.
Abstract
Pure, mixed and doped metal oxides (MOX) have attracted great interest for the development of electrical and electrochemical sensors since they are cheaper, faster, easier to operate and capable of online analysis and real-time identification. This review focuses on highly sensitive chemoresistive type sensors based on doped-SnO2, RhO, ZnO-Ca, Smx-CoFe2-xO4 semiconductors used to detect toxic gases (H2, CO, NO2) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) (e.g., acetone, ethanol) in monitoring of gaseous markers in the breath of patients with specific pathologies and for environmental pollution control. Interesting results about the monitoring of biochemical substances as dopamine, epinephrine, serotonin and glucose have been also reported using electrochemical sensors based on hybrid MOX nanocomposite modified glassy carbon and screen-printed carbon electrodes. The fundamental sensing mechanisms and commercial limitations of the MOX-based electrical and electrochemical sensors are discussed providing research directions to bridge the existing gap between new sensing concepts and real-world analytical applications.Entities:
Keywords: biosensing; conductometric sensors; electrochemical sensors; gas sensing; metal-oxide; nanohybrid
Year: 2021 PMID: 33916680 DOI: 10.3390/s21072494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576