4.7 Article

3D-printed holder for drawing highly reproducible pencil-on-paper electrochemical devices

Journal

MICROCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 190, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00604-023-05920-x

Keywords

Hand-drawing; Pencil-drawn; Paper-based substrate; Electrode fabrication; Cyclic voltammetry; 3D printing

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study proposes a new method of using a 3D-printed pencil holder to fabricate paper-based electrochemical devices, aiming to solve the lack of reproducibility in hand-drawn electrodes. By keeping the pressure and angulation of the pencil constant on the paper substrate, this method significantly improves the reproducibility and reliability of pencil-drawn electrodes. The results demonstrate the high reproducibility and accuracy of the electrodes prepared with the 3D-printed support. This approach is believed to make pencil-drawn technology more robust, accessible, reliable, and inexpensive.
Pencil drawing is one of the simplest and most cost-effective ways of fabricating miniaturized electrodes on a paper substrate. However, it is limited by the lack of reproducibility regarding the electrode drawing process. A 3D-printed pencil holder (3DPH) is proposed here for simple, reproducible, and low-cost hand-drawn fabrication of paper-based electrochemical devices. 3DPH was designed to keep pressure and angulation of the graphite mine constant on the paper substrate using a micromechanical pencil regardless of the user/operator. This approach significantly improved the reproducibility and cost of making reliable pencil-drawn electrodes. The results showed high reproducibility and accuracy of the 3DPH-assisted electrodes prepared by 4 different operators in terms of sheet resistance and electrochemical behavior. Cyclic voltammetric (CV) curves in the presence of [Fe(CN)(6)](3-/4-) redox probe showed only 3.9% variation for the anodic peak currents of different electrodes prepared by different operators when compared with electrodes prepared without the 3D-printed support. SEM analyses revealed a more uniform graphite deposition/design of the electrodes prepared with 3DPH, which corroborates the results obtained by CV. As a proof of concept, 3DPH-assisted pencil-drawn graphite electrodes were employed for dopamine detection in synthetic saliva, showing a proportional increase in anodic peak current at 0.12 V vs. carbon pRE with increasing dopamine (DA) concentration, with a detection limit of 0.39 mu mol L-1. Moreover recovery was in the range 93-104% of DA (4-7% RSD) in synthetic saliva for three different concentrations, demonstrating the reliability of the approach. Finally, we believe this approach can make pencil-drawn technology more robust, accessible, reliable, and inexpensive for real on-site applications, especially in hard-to-reach locations or research centers with little investment.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available