4.8 Article

A Nanojunction pH Sensor within a Nanowire

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 94, Issue 35, Pages 12167-12175

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02606

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CBET-2149631, CHE-2201042]

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Nanoscopic pH sensors fabricated within a single gold nanowire using wet chemical methods exhibit pH sensing performance approaching that of a conventional macroscopic pH glass-membrane electrode. These sensors can accurately measure pH values across a wide range and can be corrected by measuring salt concentration.
pH sensors that are nanoscopic in all three dimensions are fabricated within a single gold nanowire. Fabrication involves the formation of a nanogap within the nanowire via electromigration, followed by electropolymerization of pH-responsive poly(aniline) (PANI) that fills the nanogap forming the nanojunction. All fabrication steps are performed using wet chemical methods that do not require a clean room. The measured electrical impedance of the PANI nanojunction is correlated with pH from 2.0 to 9.0 with a response time of 30 s. Larger, micrometer-scale PANI junctions exhibit a slower response. The measured pH is weakly influenced by the salt concentration of the contacting aqueous solution. An impedance measurement at two frequencies (300 kHz and 1.0 Hz) enables estimation of the salt concentration and correction of the measured pH value, preserving the accuracy of the pH measurement across the entire calibration curve for salt concentrations up to 1.0 M. The result is a nanoscopic pH sensor with pH sensing performance approaching that of a conventional, macroscopic pH glass-membrane electrode.

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