Journal Article10.1039/C8TC04448A
3D graphene/hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin nanocomposite as an electrochemical chiral sensor for the recognition of tryptophan enantiomers
Wenting Liang,Yanqin Rong,Lifang Fan,Wenjuan Dong,Qingchen Dong,Cheng Yang,Zhihui Zhong,Chuan Dong,Shaomin Shuang,Wai Yeung Wong +9 more
84
TL;DR: In this article, a chiral sensing platform was designed for electrochemical enantiomer recognition based on the coupling of three-dimensional-graphene with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin.
read more
Abstract: A novel and facile chiral sensing platform has been designed for electrochemical enantiomer recognition based on the coupling of three-dimensional-graphene with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (3D-G/HP-β-CD). The chiral platform synergistically exploits HP-β-CD as a supramolecular chiral recognizer and 3D-G as an electrochemical indicator, to recognize tryptophan (Trp) enantiomers by differential pulse voltammetry (DPV) approach with significantly discernable electrochemical signals. The different host–guest interactions of D- and L-Trp with HP-β-CD reveal high binding affinity to target L-tryptophan for sensing tryptophan isomers. Moreover, we found that the peak currents of the two enantiomers showed a linear response in the concentration range of 0.5–175 μM with low detection limits of 9.6 nM and 38 nM for L- and D-Trp (S/N = 3), respectively, exhibiting remarkable sensitivity, fine reproducibility as well as great stability. This process, which is the initial demonstration of cyclodextrin-functionalized 3D-G for an electrochemical chiral recognition application, provides a new strategy for enantiosensing.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Application of chiral materials in electrochemical sensors
TL;DR: This review presents an overview of chiral materials in a view of various chiral selectors, including amino acids and their derivatives, proteins, polysaccharides, chiral ligand exchange compounds, Chiral cavity compounds, and chiral ionic liquids, which were applied for the recognition of Chiral molecules.
125
Chiral Graphene Hybrid Materials: Structures, Properties, and Chiral Applications
TL;DR: In this article, the progress made in chiral materials developed from graphene and their derivatives is reviewed, with the hope of providing a systemic knowledge about the construction of chiral graphenes and chiral applications thereof.
62
Simultaneous electrochemical sensing of serotonin, dopamine and ascorbic acid by using a nanocomposite prepared from reduced graphene oxide, Fe3O4 and hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin.
Wenting Liang,Yanqin Rong,Lifang Fan,Caihong Zhang,Wenjuan Dong,Jing Li,Jianping Niu,Cheng Yang,Shaomin Shuang,Chuan Dong,Wai Yeung Wong +10 more
TL;DR: The interconnected porous reduced graphene oxide framework tightly anchored to the Fe3O4 magnetic nanoparticles warrants good electrical conductivity and efficient catalytic activity and acts as a supramolecular host with high recognition ability for 5-HT, DA and AA.
59
Graphene-ferrocene functionalized cyclodextrin composite with high electrochemical recognition capability for phenylalanine enantiomers.
TL;DR: An efficient chiral electrochemical sensing interface was constructed by using the rGO-Fc-CD composite as the electrode modification for the recognition of phenylalanine (Phe) enantiomers, indicating that the developed sensor has wide application prospects.
56
References
Electric Field Effect in Atomically Thin Carbon Films
Kostya S. Novoselov,Andre K. Geim,Sergey V. Morozov,Da Jiang,Y. Zhang,S. V. Dubonos,Irina V. Grigorieva,A. A. Firsov +7 more
TL;DR: Monocrystalline graphitic films are found to be a two-dimensional semimetal with a tiny overlap between valence and conductance bands and they exhibit a strong ambipolar electric field effect.
66.3K
Improved Synthesis of Graphene Oxide
Daniela C. Marcano,Dmitry V. Kosynkin,Jacob M. Berlin,Alexander Sinitskii,Zhengzong Sun,Alexander S. Slesarev,Lawrence B. Alemany,Wei Lu,James M. Tour +8 more
TL;DR: An improved method for the preparation of graphene oxide (GO) is described, finding that excluding the NaNO(3), increasing the amount of KMnO(4), and performing the reaction in a 9:1 mixture of H(2)SO(4)/H(3)PO(4) improves the efficiency of the oxidation process.
11.3K
Graphene and Graphene Oxide: Synthesis, Properties, and Applications
TL;DR: An overview of the synthesis, properties, and applications of graphene and related materials (primarily, graphite oxide and its colloidal suspensions and materials made from them), from a materials science perspective.
A Spectrophotometric Investigation of the Interaction of Iodine with Aromatic Hydrocarbons
H. A. Benesi,Joel H. Hildebrand +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the position of the absorption bands of iodine solutions in the visible region moved gradually from violet to brown, the shift being only small in the case of benzene in which the color of iodine is a red-violet.
7.6K
Honeycomb Carbon: A Review of Graphene
Abstract: Graphene is the name given to a two-dimensional sheet of sp2-hybridized carbon. Its extended honeycomb network is the basic building block of other important allotropes; it can be stacked to form 3D graphite, rolled to form 1D nanotubes, and wrapped to form 0D fullerenes. Long-range π-conjugation in graphene yields extraordinary thermal, mechanical, and electrical properties, which have long been the interest of many theoretical studies and more recently became an exciting area for experimentalists. While studies of graphite have included those utilizing fewer and fewer layers for some time,1 the field was delivered a jolt in 2004, when Geim and co-workers at Manchester University first isolated single-layer samples from graphite (see Figure 1).2 This led to an explosion of interest, in part because two-dimensional crystals were thought to be thermodynamically unstable at finite temperatures.3,4 Quasi-twodimensional films grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) are stabilized by a supporting substrate, which often plays a significant role in growth and has an appreciable influence on electrical properties.5 In contrast, the mechanical exfoliation technique used by the Manchester group isolated the two-dimensional crystals from three-dimensional graphite. Resulting singleand few-layer flakes were pinned to the substrate by only van der Waals forces and could be made free-standing by etching away the substrate.6-9 This minimized any induced effects and allowed scientists to probe graphene’s intrinsic properties. The experimental isolation of single-layer graphene first and foremost yielded access to a large amount of interesting physics.10,11 Initial studies included observations of graphene’s ambipolar field effect,2 the quantum Hall effect at room temperature,12-17 measurements of extremely high carrier mobility,7,18-20 and even the first ever detection of single molecule adsorption events.21,22 These properties generated huge interest in the possible implementation of graphene in a myriad of devices. These include future generations of high-speed and radio frequency logic devices, thermally and electrically conductive reinforced composites, sensors, and transparent electrodes for displays and solar cells. Despite intense interest and continuing experimental success by device physicists, widespread implementation of graphene has yet to occur. This is primarily due to the difficulty of reliably producing high quality samples, especially in any scalable fashion.23 The challenge is really 2-fold because performance depends on both the number of layers present and the overall quality of the crystal lattice.19,24-26 So far, the original top-down approach of mechanical exfoliation has produced the highest quality samples, but the method is neither high throughput nor high-yield. In order to exfoliate a single sheet, van der Waals attraction between exactly the first and second layers must be overcome without disturbing any subsequent sheets. Therefore, a number of alternative approaches to obtaining single layers have been explored, a few of which have led to promising proof-ofconcept devices. Alternatives to mechanical exfoliation include primarily three general approaches: chemical efforts to exfoliate and stabilize individual sheets in solution,27-32 bottom-up methods to grow graphene directly from organic precursors,33-36 and attempts to catalyze growth in situ on a substrate.37-43 Each of these approaches has its drawbacks. For chemically derived graphene, complete exfoliation in solution so far requires extensive modification of the 2D crystal lattice, which degrades device performance.31,44 Alternatively, bottom-up techniques have yet to produce large and uniform † Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and California NanoSystems Institute. ‡ Department of Materials Science and Engineering and California NanoSystems Institute. Chem. Rev. 2010, 110, 132–145 132