4.8 Article

Stochastic Sensing of Single Molecules in a Nanofluidic Electrochemical Device

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages 2881-2886

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nl2013423

Keywords

Nanofluidics; electrochemistry; single-molecule detection; redox cycling; first-passage time

Funding

  1. NanoNed
  2. NWO

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We report the electrochemical detection of individual redox-active molecules as they freely diffuse in solution. Our approach is based on microfabricated nanofluidic devices, wherein repeated reduction and oxidation at two closely spaced electrodes yields a giant sensitivity gain. Single molecules entering and leaving the cavity are revealed as anti-correlated steps in the faradaic current measured simultaneously through the two electrodes. Cross-correlation analysis provides unequivocal evidence of single molecule sensitivity. We further find agreement with numerical simulations of the stochastic signals and analytical results for the distribution of residence times. This new detection capability can serve as a powerful alternative when fluorescent labeling is invasive or impossible. It further enables new fundamental (bio)electrochemical experiments, for example, localized detection of neurotransmitter release, studies of enzymes with redox-active products, and single-cell electrochemical assays. Finally, our lithography-based approach renders the devices suitable for integration in highly parallelized, all-electrical analysis systems.

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