4.8 Article

Tuning the Structure, Conductivity, and Wettability of Laser-Induced Graphene for Multiplexed Open Microfluidic Environmental Biosensing and Energy Storage Devices

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages 15-28

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c04197

Keywords

wettability; graphene; microfluidics; laser scribing; biosensor; supercapacitor

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [ECCS-1841649, CMMI-2037026, CBET-1706994, CBET-1756999, CBET-1805512]
  2. National Institutes of Health [1U01AA029328-0]
  3. National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture [2020-67021-31375, 2021-67021-34457, 2021-67011-35130]

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The study presents a scalable fabrication approach to create laser-induced graphene (LIG) with different electrical conductivity, surface morphology, and surface wettability. The LIG-based integrated microfluidics and electrochemical sensors demonstrated high sensitivities and low limits of detection for various ions and a pesticide. LIG was also used to create a high-performance micro supercapacitor with improved power density and energy density. This tunable fabrication approach is expected to have a wide range of applications in real-time health and environmental sensors as well as energy storage/harvesting modules.
The integration of microfluidics and electrochemical cells is at the forefront of emerging sensors and energy systems; however, a fabrication scheme that can create both the microfluidics and electrochemical cells in a scalable fashion is still lacking. We present a one-step, mask-free process to create, pattern, and tune laser-induced graphene (LIG) with a ubiquitous CO2 laser. The laser parameters are adjusted to create LIG with different electrical conductivity, surface morphology, and surface wettability without the need for postchemical modification. Such definitive control over material properties enables the creation of LIG-based integrated open microfluidics and electrochemical sensors that are capable of dividing a single water sample along four multifurcating paths to three ion selective electrodes (ISEs) for potassium (K+), nitrate (NO3-), and ammonium (NH4+) monitoring and to an enzymatic pesticide sensor for organophosphate pesticide (parathion) monitoring. The ISEs displayed near-Nernstian sensitivities and low limits of detection (LODs) (10(-5.01) M, 10(-5.07) M, and 10(-4.89) M for the K+, NO3-, and NH4+ ISEs, respectively) while the pesticide sensor exhibited the lowest LOD (15.4 pM) for an electrochemical parathion sensor to date. LIG was also specifically patterned and tuned to create a high-performance electrochemical micro supercapacitor (MSC) capable of improving the power density by 2 orders of magnitude compared to a Li-based thin-film battery and the energy density by 3 orders of magnitude compared to a commercial electrolytic capacitor. Hence, this tunable fabrication approach to LIG is expected to enable a wide range of real-time, point-of-use health and environmental sensors as well as energy storage/harvesting modules.

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