4.6 Article

Oxygen vacancies boosted vanadium doped ZnO nanostructures-based voltage-switchable binary biosensor

Journal

NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/ac2c44

Keywords

vanadium doped ZnO; oxygen vacancies; glucose; H2O2; binary biosensor

Funding

  1. Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission

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This study presents a vanadium-doped zinc oxide nanostructure with voltage switchable electrocatalytic properties for accurate measurements of glucose and hydrogen peroxide. The material's oxygen vacancies, controlled by stoichiometric ratios, play a crucial role in voltage-dependent measurements of different analytes. The developed nanostructures demonstrate outstanding sensing ability, high selectivity, low detection limit, thermal stability, and long-term stability. The results also show good response to human blood serum and commercially available samples.
The development of a reliable non-enzymatic multi-analyte biosensor is remained a great challenge for biomedical and industrial applications. In this prospective, rationally designed electrode materials having voltage switchable electrocatalytic properties are highly promising. Here, we report vanadium doped ZnO engineered nanostructures (Zn1-x V (x) O where 0 <= x <= 0.1) which exhibit voltage switchable electrocatalytic properties for accurate measurements of glucose and hydrogen peroxide. Microstructures and chemical analysis show that the oxygen vacancies in the material can be tuned by controlling the stoichiometric ratios which play key role for voltage dependent measurements of different analytes. The developed Zn1-x V (x) O nanostructures exhibit outstanding sensing ability for binary analytes with a high selectivity, low detection limit, thermal stability and long-term stability. The Zn0.9V0.1O/glassy carbon (GC) electrode shows 3-fold increase in reproducible sensitivity for both glucose (655.24 mu A mM(-1) cm(-2)) and H2O2 (13309.37 mu A mM(-1) cm(-2)) as compared to the pristine ZnO/GC electrode. Moreover, the electrode also shows good response for human blood serum and commercially available samples. The results demonstrate that defect engineering is a promising route for the development of cost-effective non-enzymatic multi-analyte sensors for practical applications.

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