4.8 Article

Nanostructuring Platinum Nanoparticles on Multilayered Graphene Petal Nanosheets for Electrochemical Biosensing

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 22, Issue 16, Pages 3399-3405

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.201200551

Keywords

multi-layered graphene; platinum nanoparticles; nanoelectrode arrays; conductive polymers; glucose biosensor

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. Purdue Research Foundation

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Hybridization of nanoscale metals and carbon nanotubes into composite nanomaterials has produced some of the best-performing sensors to date. The challenge remains to develop scalable nanofabrication methods that are amenable to the development of sensors with broad sensing ranges. A scalable nanostructured biosensor based on multilayered graphene petal nanosheets (MGPNs), Pt nanoparticles, and a biorecognition element (glucose oxidase) is presented. The combination of zero-dimensional nanoparticles on a two-dimensional support that is arrayed in the third dimension creates a sensor platform with exceptional characteristics. The versatility of the biosensor platform is demonstrated by altering biosensor performance (i.e., sensitivity, detection limit, and linear sensing range) through changing the size, density, and morphology of electrodeposited Pt nanoparticles on the MGPNs. This work enables a robust sensor design that demonstrates exceptional performance with enhanced glucose sensitivity (0.3 mu M detection limit, 0.0150 mM linear sensing range), a long stable shelf-life (>1 month), and a high selectivity over electroactive, interfering species commonly found in human serum samples.

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