| Literature DB >> 35884346 |
Madhusudan B Kulkarni1, Narasimha H Ayachit2, Tejraj M Aminabhavi2.
Abstract
Biosensors are ubiquitous in a variety of disciplines, such as biochemical, electrochemical, agricultural, and biomedical areas. They can integrate various point-of-care applications, such as in the food, healthcare, environmental monitoring, water quality, forensics, drug development, and biological domains. Multiple strategies have been employed to develop and fabricate miniaturized biosensors, including design, optimization, characterization, and testing. In view of their interactions with high-affinity biomolecules, they find application in the sensitive detection of analytes, even in small sample volumes. Among the many developed techniques, microfluidics have been widely explored; these use fluid mechanics to operate miniaturized biosensors. The currently used commercial devices are bulky, slow in operation, expensive, and require human intervention; thus, it is difficult to automate, integrate, and miniaturize the existing conventional devices for multi-faceted applications. Microfluidic biosensors have the advantages of mobility, operational transparency, controllability, and stability with a small reaction volume for sensing. This review addresses biosensor technologies, including the design, classification, advances, and challenges in microfluidic-based biosensors. The value chain for developing miniaturized microfluidic-based biosensor devices is critically discussed, including fabrication and other associated protocols for application in various point-of-care testing applications.Entities:
Keywords: biosensor; electrochemical; fabrication; microfluidics; miniaturization; nanomaterials; point of care (POC)
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35884346 PMCID: PMC9313327 DOI: 10.3390/bios12070543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Three generations of the biosensor process.
Evolution of the development of biosensors.
| Year | Generation | Development Phases of Biosensor |
|---|---|---|
| 1906 | First | M. Cramer noticed voltage difference generating between parts of the electrolyte. |
| 1909 | Sorensen described the idea of pH and pH sensors. | |
| 1909–1922 | Nelson and Griffin were the first to discover that enzyme invertase could be immobilized on charcoal aluminium hydroxide [ | |
| 1922 | Hughes observed a pH determination electrode [ | |
| 1956 | Clark first discovered the biosensor electrode that is capable of determining blood oxygen levels [ | |
| 1962 | Clark also demonstrated the use of an amperometric enzyme electrode for glucose sensing [ | |
| 1967 | Hicks et al. [ | |
| 1969 | The first potentiometric enzyme electrode-based urea detection sensor was reported by Montalvo and Guilbault. | |
| 1970 | Bergveld discovered ion-sensitive field-effect transistors (ISFET) [ | |
| 1973 | Lubrano and Guilbault demonstrated glucose and lactate enzyme platinum electrode to detect hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) [ | |
| 1974 | Klaus Mosbach group developed a thermistor sensor based on a heat-sensitive enzyme [ | |
| 1975 | Opitz and Lubbers developed an optical biosensor for alcohol detection [ | |
| 1976 | Second | Clemens et al. [ |
| 1977 | La Roche introduced the lactate analyzer LA 640, which was utilized to transmit an electron from dehydrogenase to an electrode [ | |
| 1980 | Peterson was the first to perform in vivo blood gas analysis to create a fiber-optic pH sensor [ | |
| 1982 | Schultz detected glucose by using the fiber-optic biosensor [ | |
| 1983 | Third | Liedberg discovered the reliance-based reactions in real time using the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) method in real time [ |
| 1984 | For glucose detection, the first mediated amperometric biosensor was constructed using ferrocene and glucose oxidase [ | |
| 1987 | University of Cambridge created a pen-sized detector for assessing blood glucose levels. | |
| 1990 | Pharmacia Biacore proposed an SPR-based biosensor [ | |
| 1992 | i-STAT developed a handheld blood biosensor [ | |
| 2018 | Girbi designed a neuron-on-chip biosensor to measure the nerve impulse conduction [ | |
| 2021 | Kulkarni et al. [ |
Figure 2Schematics of a biosensor device consisting of various modules.
Figure 3Classification of biosensors depending on the diverse use of bioreceptors and transducers.
Figure 4Types of nanomaterial-based biosensors (nano-biosensors).
Nanomaterials used in the development of biosensors.
| Nanoparticle | Analyte | Transducer | Linear Range | LOD | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Au NPs | Aflatoxin B1 | SPR | 0.2–600 nM | 0.40 nM | [ |
| Au NPs | Pb2+ | Fluorescence | 40 nm–3 µm | 15.9 nm | [ |
| Ag NPs | H2O2 | Colorimetric | 0.04–7.4 µm | 0.032 nm | [ |
| Ag/Pd NPs | Mucin 1 | Electrochemi-luminescence | 1.210 fg mL−1 | 0.45 fg mL−1 | [ |
| Au NPs/TiO2 | H2O2 | Electrochemical | 67–1525 µm | 6 µm | [ |
| Pt-Fe3O4@C | Sarcosine | Amperometric | 0.4–62 µm | 0.43 µm | [ |
| Pt NFs/PANi | Urea | Cyclic Voltammetry | 25 mM | 10 µm | [ |
| Pt@CeO2 | Dopamine | Electrochemical | 2–185 nM | 0.71 nM | [ |
| Cu/rGO-BP | Glucose | Electrochemical | 0.3–5 mM | 11 µm | [ |
| Ni/Cu MOF | Glucose | FET | 2 µM−25 mM | 0.51 µM | [ |
| NiO@Au | Lactic acid | Electrochemical | 150 µM−0.6 M | 11.6 µM | [ |
| Co3O4 | Glutamate | Electrochemical chip | 12–650 µM | 10 µM | [ |
| MnO2 | Salmonella | Impedimetric | 3 × 101–3 × 106 | 19 CFU mL−1 | [ |
| ZnO-rGO | Dopamine | CV | 0.5–1550 pM | 8.75 ± 0.64 pM | [ |
| ZnO NPs | Amyloid | Optoelectronic | 1–15 µL | 2.76 ng | [ |
| TiO2 | Asulam | Photoelectrochemical | 0.04–4 ng mL−1 | 4.1 pg mL−1 | [ |
Figure 5Schematic diagram of (a) amperometric/voltammetric, (b) potentiometric, and (c) conductometric biosensors, and (d) equivalent circuit of the impedimetric biosensor.
Electrochemical biosensors with principles, advantages, and disadvantages.
| Electrochemical Biosensors | Principles | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Potentiometric | Electric potential | Decreased analysis time, good selectivity and sensitivity, and sample treatment not required. | Temperature, pH, and immunological cross-reaction variables all have an impact on sensitivity and lifespan. |
| Amperometric | Oxidation/reduction | Portability due to the portable system, high selectivity, sensitivity. | Regenerative between measurements. |
| Impedimetric | Change in impedance | High selectivity and sensitivity, simple operation, small device. | Complex construction, expensive labelling markers. |
| Conductometric | Change in conductance | Low cost, fast response. | Highly buffered solution may interfere. |
Figure 6Miniaturized biosensors based on existing handheld devices and microfluidic systems for point-of-care testing (POCT).
Different types of biosensors with working principles and applications.
| Types | Principles | Applications | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glucose oxidase electrode biosensor | Glucose oxidation using electrochemistry | Glucose study in biological samples. | [ |
| Uric acid biosensor | Electrochemistry | The purpose of this test is to discover clinical abnormalities or diseases. | [ |
| Piezoelectric biosensor | Electrochemistry | Detecting carbamate and organophosphate. | [ |
| Acetylcholinesterase inhibition-based biosensor | Electrochemistry | Understanding the effects of pesticides. | [ |
| HbA1c biosensor | Electrochemistry using ferroceneboronic acid | Glycated haemoglobin measurement with a robust analytical approach. | [ |
| Fluorescence-tagged biosensor | Fluorescence | For a better knowledge of biological processes including the numerous molecular systems that make up a cell. | [ |
| Nanoparticles-based biosensor | Electrochemical/optical/visual | Diagnostic tools are used in a variety of disciplines, including biomedicine. | [ |
| Quartz–crystal biosensor | Electromagnetic | For the development of ultra-high-sensitive protein detection in liquids. | [ |
| Silicon biosensor | Optical/fluorescence | Cancer therapy, bioimaging, and biosensing. | [ |
| Hydrogel biosensor | Optical/visual | Biomolecular immobilization. | [ |
| Microfabricated | Optical using cytochrome P450 enzyme | Pharmaceutical research and development. | [ |
| Microfabricated | Optical | To monitor biochemical oxygen demand and environmental toxicity as well as heavy metal and pesticide toxicity. | [ |
| Nano-biosensors | Fiber optic | Cylindrical waveguide that guides the light within the core of the fiber used for nanomaterials and the terahertz domain meta-surface-based refractometric. | [ |
| Plasmonic biosensors | Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) | Highly sensitive to the refractive index (RI) of the medium in direct contact with the metal film. | [ |
| GeO2-doped biosensors | Refractive index (RI) | High sensitivity offers a promising approach for the detection of unknown RI analytes in chemical and biological fields in the near-infrared region. | [ |
| Microchannel plasmon biosensors | Photonic crystal fiber | D-shaped photonic crystal fiber (PCF) sensor for malaria diagnosis. | [ |
| MXenes-based biosensors | Fiber optic SPR sensor | A spectral SPR-based fiber optic to diagnose colorectal cancer. | [ |
| Au nanowire-based biosensors | Optics | Embedded micro-drilled dual-channel | [ |
| Au Nanowire-based biosensors | Optical Fiber Refractive Index | Concave-shaped refractive index sensor (CSRIS) exploiting localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR). | [ |
| Ag Nanowire-based biosensors | Surface plasmon | Concave-shaped microfluidic channel (CSMFC). | [ |
Figure 7Schematic representation of various fabrication techniques used in the development of miniaturized microfluidic biosensors.
List of various microfabrication techniques used in the development of miniaturized microfluidic biosensors.
| Fabrication Instruments [Ref] | Materials | Specifications | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CO2 Laser Ablation [ | PMMA, polyimide | IR source, λ = 10.6 µm | Precise dissection, good efficiency | Expensive instrument |
| Voltera Ink-jet Printer [ | Paper, PCB, polyimide | Minimum trace width = 0.2 mm | Flexible substrates | Refilling of conductive ink |
| UV-Direct Laser writer (DLW) [ | Glass, silicon wafer | GaN laser diode, λ = 405 nm | Better resolution | Expensive instrument |
| FDM 3D printer [ | ABS, PLA, PCL | Filament Diameter = 1.75 mm, accuracy = 100 µm | Easily scaled to any size | Less throughput, low speed, low resolution |
| Z-morph 3D printer [ | Paper, wood, PMMA | Blue laser, λ = 420 nm | Multipurpose tool with interchangeable tool heads capable of FDM 3D printing (50 µm accuracy), CNC cutting/drilling, and PCB engraving | Slow process |
| Photolithography [ | Dry film photoresist (DFR) | Max width = 325 mm, maximum substrate thickness = 3 mm | Photosensitive polymers are necessary | Mask is expensive |
| SLA 3D printer [ | Various liquid resins | Layer resolution = 35 microns | Higher resolution and accuracy | Requires post-processing tasks such as cleaning with IPA and ethanol |
| Screen printer [ | Cloth, paper | Minimum trace width = 0.4 mm | Low cost | Less accurate |
| Sothlithography [ | PDMS | Silicone elastomer | Transparent | Low thermal conductivity |
Different materials used for the fabrication of microfluidic biosensors.
| Materials | Melting Point (°C) | Thermal Conductivity (W/mK) | Advantages | Disadvantages | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) | >200 °C | 2.73 |
Optical transparency; Low cost; Simple fabrication process; Conformal contact achievable on non-planar surfaces; Preamble to a variety of liquids and vapors; Excellent thermal stability. |
Wide and shallow microchannels easily collapse during bonding; Tends to shrink to a factor of 1% upon curing. | [ |
| Polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) | 150 °C | 0.17–0.19 |
Excellent transparency; High mechanical strength and hardness; High rigidity; Good thermal stability; Low water adsorption. |
Brittle; Low impact resistance; Low chemical resistance; Possibility of stress problems; Requires additional instrument to fabricate. | [ |
| Graphene | >250 °C | ~4000 |
Excellent electrical and thermal conductivity; Lightweight; Flexible; Chemically inert. |
Susceptible to oxidative environment; Expensive. | [ |
| Glass | 1200 °C | 0.76 |
Cheaper; Good protection power; Outstanding transparency; Great heat resistance. |
Fragile; More weight. | [ |
| Silicone | 350 °C | 0.2 |
Excellent thermal stability; Good flexibility; Low chemical reactivity; High efficiency. |
Brittle; Expensive for a single substrate. | [ |
| Paper (Cellulose) | 220 °C | 0.05 |
Very cheap; Easy to process materials; Fluid flow is automatic; Biodegradable. |
Low resolution; Limited to simple designs. | [ |
Figure 8(A) Optimized ink-jetted paper device for electroanalytical detection of picric acid [114]. (B) Bacterial cellulose-based electrochemical sensing platform for miniaturized biosensors [115]. Reprinted from the above-mentioned references with the permission of copyright from the respective journals.
Figure 9(A) (a) Schematic illustration of the fabrication of micro-patterned design with proposed heavy-metal-detection sensor with three electrodes and TRGO coating onto Au electrode; (b) photomicrograph of a miniaturized and completely integrated sensor [116]. (B) (a) Droplet-based electrochemical (EC) sensor design principle; (b) sensor component sizes and three-electrode arrangements; and (c) schematic illustration of the droplet-based sensor production technique using screen printing [117]. Reprinted from the above-mentioned references with permission of copyright from the respective journals.
Figure 10(A) Stepwise approach for fabricating a microfluidic device showing the use of a PCB printer to print microelectrodes and three-electrode inset [118]. (B) MoboSens has a concept design and a practical package: (a) assembly view of MoboSens, (b) detailed element description of MoboSens, and (c) photograph of the entire MoboSens system [119]. Reprinted with permission of copyright from the respective journals.
Figure 11Schematic representation of various applications of biosensors.
Figure 12Detailed SWOT analysis of miniaturized biosensors.
Figure 13Future scope of biosensors.