Electrochemical Sensors and Biosensors
871
TL;DR: This review covers advances in electrochemical and biochemical sensor development and usage during 2010 and 2011 and focuses on novel methods and materials, with a particular focus on the increasing use of graphene sheets for sensor material development.
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Abstract: This review covers advances in electrochemical and biochemical sensor development and usage during 2010 and 2011 In choosing scholarly articles to contribute to this review, special emphasis was placed on work published in the areas of reference electrodes, potentiometric sensors, voltammetric sensors, amperometric sensors, biosensors, immunosensors, and mass sensors In the past two years there have been a number of important papers, that do not fall into the general subsections contained within the larger sections Such novel advances are very important for the field of electrochemical sensors as they open up new avenues and methods for future research Each section above contains a subsection titled “Other Papers of Interest” that includes such articles and describes their importance to the field in general For example, while most electrochemical techniques for sensing analytes of interest are based on the changes in potential or current, Shan et al1 have developed a completely novel method for performing electrochemical measurements In their work, they report a method for imaging local electrochemical current using the optical signal of the electrode surface generated from a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) The electrochemical current image is based on the fact that the current density can be easily calculated from the local SPR signal The authors demonstrated this concept by imaging traces of TNT on a fingerprint on a gold substrate
Full articles and reviews were primarily amassed by searching the SciFinder Scholar and ISI Web of Knowledge Additional articles were found through alternate databases or by perusing analytical journals for pertinent publications Due to the reference limitation, only publications written in English were considered for inclusion Obviously, there have been more published accounts of groundbreaking work with electrochemical and biochemical sensors than those covered here This review is a small sampling of the available literature and not intended to cover every advance of the past two years The literature chosen focuses on new trends in materials, techniques, and clinically relevant applications of novel sensors To ensure proper coverage of these trends, theoretical publications and applications of previously reported sensor development were excluded
We want to remind our readers that this review is not intended to provide comprehensive coverage of electrochemical sensor development, but rather to provide a glimpse of the available depth of knowledge published in the past two years This review is meant to focus on novel methods and materials, with a particular focus on the increasing use of graphene sheets for sensor material development For readers seeking more information on the general principles behind electrochemical sensors and electrochemical methods, we recommend other sources with a broader scope2, 3 Electrochemical sensor research is continually providing new insights into a variety of fields and providing a breadth of relevant literature that is worthy of inclusion in this review Unfortunately, it is impossible to cover each publication and unintentional oversights are inevitable We sincerely apologize to the authors of electrochemical and biochemical sensor publications that were inadvertently overlooked
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Citations
The Optoelectronic Nose: Colorimetric and Fluorometric Sensor Arrays.
TL;DR: A comprehensive review on the development and state of the art of colorimetric and fluorometric sensor arrays is presented and the various chemometric and statistical analyses of high-dimensional data are presented and critiqued in reference to their use in chemical sensing.
905
Optical sensor arrays for chemical sensing: the optoelectronic nose
TL;DR: A comprehensive review is presented on the development and state of the art of colorimetric and fluorometric sensor arrays, which probe the chemical reactivity of analytes, rather than their physical properties.
808
Electrically-Transduced Chemical Sensors Based on Two-Dimensional Nanomaterials
TL;DR: Key advances in the application of 2D materials, from both a historical and analytical perspective, are summarized for four different groups of analytes: gases, volatile compounds, ions, and biomolecules.
639
Nanostructured Sensors for Detection of Heavy Metals: A Review
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a recent advance in optical, electrochemical and field-effect transistor sensors for heavy metal detection, focusing on colorimetric, fluorescent, surface-enhanced Raman scattering and surface plasmon resonance devices.
568
References
Sandwich-type amperometric immunosensor for human immunoglobulin G using antibody-adsorbed Au/SiO2 nanoparticles
TL;DR: In this paper, a sandwich-type electrochemical immunosensor for human immunoglobulin G (hIgG) was developed using Au/SiO2 nanoparticles (NPs) with adsorbed horseradish peroxidase-anti-gG as the secondary antibody layer.
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The self-assembly, characterization and application of hemoglobin immobilized on Fe3O4@Pt core-shell nanoparticles
TL;DR: In this paper, direct electron transfer is demonstrated between an electrode and hemoglobin that was immobilized on a film of Fe3O4@pt-chitosan (Fe3O 4@Pt-CS), and the electrode displayed excellent electrocatalytic activity towards oxygen and hydrogen peroxide reduction.
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A new potentiometric sensor for the determination of α-amylase activity.
Nikola Sakač,Milan Sak-Bosnar,Marija Horvat,Dubravka Madunić-Čačić,Aleksandar Széchenyi,Barna Kovács +5 more
TL;DR: A platinum redox sensor for the direct potentiometric determination of α-amylase concentration has been described and exhibited satisfactory accuracy and precision and good agreement with a standard spectrophotometric method and high-sensitive fully automated descret analyser method.
27
Disposable potentiometric sensors for monitoring cholinesterase activity.
TL;DR: The developed disposable sensors have been successfully applied for real-time intoxication monitoring through assaying cholinesterases (ChEs) activity in human serum and determination of organophosphate pesticide was conducted by measuring their inhibition of BuChE with successful assaying of malathion in insecticide samples with high accuracy and precision.
26
Potentiometric sensor using sub-micron Cu2O-doped RuO2 sensing electrode with improved antifouling resistance.
TL;DR: Experimental evaluation of the Cu(2)O-doped RuO(2)-SE demonstrated that the doping of RuO (2) not only improves its structure but also enhances both sensor's selectivity and antifouling properties.
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