4.7 Article

Determination of the Highly Sensitive Carboxyl-Graphene Oxide-Based Planar Optical Waveguide Localized Surface Plasmon Resonance Biosensor

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 12, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano12132146

Keywords

graphene oxide; waveguide; gold nanoparticle; localized surface plasmon resonance; anti-IgG-IgG; biotin-streptavidin; affinity constant

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST-108-2113-M-224-002, MOST-108-2221-E-020-020-MY3]
  2. Ministry of Education: Taiwan Education Technology [1100105233D]
  3. National Taiwan University of Science and Technology/National Yunlin University of Science and Technology/National Pingtung University of Science and Technology [NPUST-NYUST-NTUST-111-04]

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This study develops a highly sensitive and low-cost carboxyl-graphene-oxide-based planar optical waveguide localized surface plasmon resonance biosensor. The sensor exhibits good repeatability and very low detection sensitivity, making it suitable for detecting low concentrations or small biomolecules.
This study develops a highly sensitive and low-cost carboxyl-graphene-oxide-based planar optical waveguide localized surface plasmon resonance biosensor (GO-OW LSPR biosensor), a system based on measuring light intensity changes. The structure of the sensing chip comprises an optical waveguide (OW)-slide glass and microfluidic-poly (methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) substrate, and the OW-slide glass surface-modified gold nanoparticle (AuNP) combined with graphene oxide (GO). As the GO has an abundant carboxyl group (-COOH), the number of capture molecules can be increased. The refractive index sensing system uses silver-coated reflective film to compare the refractive index sensitivity of the GO-OW LSPR biosensor to increase the refractive index sensitivity. The result shows that the signal variation of the system with the silver-coated reflective film is 1.57 times that of the system without the silver-coated reflective film. The refractive index sensitivity is 5.48 RIU-1 and the sensor resolution is 2.52 +/- 0.23 x 10(-6) RIU. The biochemical sensing experiment performs immunoglobulin G (IgG) and streptavidin detection. The limits of detection of the sensor for IgG and streptavidin are calculated to be 23.41 +/- 1.54 pg/mL and 5.18 +/- 0.50 pg/mL, respectively. The coefficient of variation (CV) of the repeatability experiment (sample numbers = 3) is smaller than 10.6%. In addition, the affinity constants of the sensor for anti-IgG/IgG and biotin/streptavidin are estimated to be 1.06 x 10(7) M-1 and 7.30 x 10(9) M-1, respectively. The result shows that the GO-OW LSPR biosensor has good repeatability and very low detection sensitivity. It can be used for detecting low concentrations or small biomolecules in the future.

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