4.8 Article

Regulating Light-Sensitive Gate of Organic Photoelectrochemical Transistor toward Sensitive Biodetection at Zero Gate Bias

Journal

SMALL STRUCTURES
Volume 2, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/sstr.202100087

Keywords

biodetection; bio-dependent regulation; gate electrodes; light sensitive; organic electrochemical transistors

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21974059]
  2. Science and Technology Project of Guizhou Province [[2017] 2861, [2018]1081]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Department of Education of Guizhou Province [[2021]021]
  4. Shandong Key Laboratory of Biochemical Analysis [SKLBA2102]

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This study introduces the bio-dependent regulation of a light-sensitive gate electrode for transducing biological events. By connecting to an immunoassay event associated with a specific analyte, the model system demonstrates target-dependent tunability and good analytical performance.
Although great advances have been achieved in the field of organic electrochemical transistor (OECT) biodetection, its fundamental sensing principles are still highly limited. Different from current dominating protocols for OECT biodetection, herein, the bio-dependent regulation of light-sensitive gate electrode for transducing the corresponding biological events is introduced. Exemplified by the enzymatically catalytic growth of gold nanoclusters to gold nanoparticles on the 3D TiO2/carbon fiber matrix gate electrode, the photoelectrochemistry of the hybrid gate photoanode shifts from the type-II heterojunction to plasmonic type, rendering reduced photon-to-electron efficiency and thus decreased current response of the gate photoanode. By connecting to an alkaline phosphatase-associated sandwich immunoassay event toward the representative analyte of C-reactive protein, the model system exhibits target-dependent tunability and good analytical performance at zero gate bias. A new sensing principle for OECT biodetection is manifested, and would spur more creativity to explore the rich light-matter interplay for advanced OECT biodetection.

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