Recent advances on structural and functional aspects of multi-dimensional nanoparticles employed for electrochemically sensing bio-molecules of medical importance

[Display omitted] •Insights provided on a diverse range of multi-dimensional nanoparticles as biosensors.•Details on structure and application of 0, 1, 2 and 3D composited nanosensors.•Electrochemical performance analyzed on uric acid, ascorbic acid and dopamine.•Data provided is helpful to choose a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Materials science & engineering. B, Solid-state materials for advanced technology Solid-state materials for advanced technology, 2021-10, Vol.272, p.115356, Article 115356
Hauptverfasser: Pramanik, Susmita, Kumar, Yogendra, Gupta, Deeksha, Vashistha, Vinod Kumar, Kumar, Anuj, Karmakar, Parimal, Das, Dipak K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Insights provided on a diverse range of multi-dimensional nanoparticles as biosensors.•Details on structure and application of 0, 1, 2 and 3D composited nanosensors.•Electrochemical performance analyzed on uric acid, ascorbic acid and dopamine.•Data provided is helpful to choose a appropriate biosensor with high accuracy and selectivity.•Covers recent advances on eco-friendly sensors/techniques of synthesis. A well framed electrochemical platform is necessary to detect efficiently molecules of clinical importance. Among several, uric acid, ascorbic acid and dopamine being found in the human body (metabolic pathway, blood and urine) can be correlated to many diseases like schizophrenia, Parkinson, hyperuricemia, etc. Conventional electrochemical techniques have associated bottlenecks related to sensitivity, selectivity, overlapping oxidation potential, interfering molecules, electrode fouling leading to false positive or negative results. Recent advances suggest the role of nanoparticles having various dimensions as ‘electrode modifiers’ to overcome these bottlenecks. The multidimensional nanoparticles could be categorized as zero, one, two and three-dimensional based on their structural conformation. Depending on the environment and interfering molecules surrounding an analyte, the choice of nanoparticles is extremely promising and could be Q-Dot, nanotubes, nanowires, nanosheets, nanochannels, nanocages and nanoflowers. Choosing the right nanoparticle could enhance the electrocatalytic activity due to high surface area, reduce interference by separating oxidation peaks and bear structural stability as well as biocompatibility for in-vivo applications. Current review additionally highlights enhancement of electrocatalytic activities using aptamers (in aptasensors) for signal amplification or ‘greener materials’ (clay, biowaste, eco-friendly solvents) for developing porous electrodes and synthesizing sensors with an eco-friendly approach.
ISSN:0921-5107
1873-4944
DOI:10.1016/j.mseb.2021.115356