4.7 Review

Nanomaterials-based sensors for the detection of COVID-19: A review

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/btm2.10305

Keywords

biosensors; coronavirus sensor; COVID-19; nanomaterial-based biosensors; pandemic; point of care diagnosis; SARS-CoV-2

Funding

  1. Research Council of Oman [BFP/RGP/HSS/18/122]
  2. University of Newcastle

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With the lack of an effective and safest vaccine to combat COVID-19 and its variants, there is an urgent need for the development of rapid and selective diagnostic devices. Nanomaterial-based biosensors show immense potential in detecting the virus in real-time with noninvasive and cost-effective properties. This review provides an overview of existing and potential nanomaterial-based biosensors, as well as the practical tools and techniques required for their development.
With the threat of increasing SARS-CoV-2 cases looming in front of us and no effective and safest vaccine available to curb this pandemic disease due to its sprouting variants, many countries have undergone a lockdown 2.0 or planning a lockdown 3.0. This has upstretched an unprecedented demand to develop rapid, sensitive, and highly selective diagnostic devices that can quickly detect coronavirus (COVID-19). Traditional techniques like polymerase chain reaction have proven to be time-inefficient, expensive, labor intensive, and impracticable in remote settings. This shifts the attention to alternative biosensing devices that can be successfully used to sense the COVID-19 infection and curb the spread of coronavirus cases. Among these, nanomaterial-based biosensors hold immense potential for rapid coronavirus detection because of their noninvasive and susceptible, as well as selective properties that have the potential to give real-time results at an economical cost. These diagnostic devices can be used for mass COVID-19 detection to understand the rapid progression of the infection and give better-suited therapies. This review provides an overview of existing and potential nanomaterial-based biosensors that can be used for rapid SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics. Novel biosensors employing different detection mechanisms are also highlighted in different sections of this review. Practical tools and techniques required to develop such biosensors to make them reliable and portable have also been discussed in the article. Finally, the review is concluded by presenting the current challenges and future perspectives of nanomaterial-based biosensors in SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics.

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