4.6 Review

Advances in Electrochemical Nano-Biosensors for Biomedical and Environmental Applications: From Current Work to Future Perspectives

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22197539

Keywords

biosensors; nanomaterials; environmental detection; biomedical diagnosis; wearable devices; machine learning; artificial intelligence (AI)

Funding

  1. Science, Technology & Innovation Funding Authority (STDF, Cairo, Egypt) [33682]

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Biosensors play a crucial role in enhancing modern life quality, particularly in the field of point-of-care technology. They offer high specificity and affordability, making them applicable in medical and food safety contexts. Among different biosensor platforms, electrochemical biosensors stand out for their advantages of being cheap, selective, specific, rapid, and portable. They can be integrated with smartphones and analytical methods to improve sensitivity and other properties. Biosensors encompass various disciplines and backgrounds such as materials science, chemistry, physics, medicine, microbiology/biology, and engineering.
Modern life quality is strongly supported by the advances made in biosensors, which has been attributed to their crucial and viable contribution in point-of-care (POC) technology developments. POC devices are exploited for the fast tracing of disease progression, rapid analysis of water, and food quality assessment. Blood glucose meters, home pregnancy strips, and COVID-19 rapid tests all represent common examples of successful biosensors. Biosensors can provide great specificity due to the incorporation of selective bio-recognition elements and portability at significantly reduced costs. Electrochemical biosensor platforms are one of the most advantageous of these platforms because they offer many merits, such as being cheap, selective, specific, rapid, and portable. Furthermore, they can be incorporated into smartphones and various analytical approaches in order to increase their sensitivity and many other properties. As a very broad and interdisciplinary area of research and development, biosensors include all disciplines and backgrounds from materials science, chemistry, physics, medicine, microbiology/biology, and engineering. Accordingly, in this state-of-the-art article, historical background alongside the long journey of biosensing construction and development, starting from the Clark oxygen electrode until reaching highly advanced wearable stretchable biosensing devices, are discussed. Consequently, selected examples among the miscellaneous applications of nanobiosensors (such as microbial detection, cancer diagnosis, toxicity analysis, food quality-control assurance, point of care, and health prognosis) are described. Eventually, future perspectives for intelligent biosensor commercialization and exploitation in real-life that is going to be supported by machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) are stated.

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