Pyrene-Appended Boronic Acids on Graphene Foam Electrodes Provide Quantum Capacitance-Based Molecular Sensors for Lactate

Simon M. Wikeley, Jakub Przybylowski, Jordan E. Gardiner, Tony D. James, Philip J. Fletcher, Mark A. Isaacs, Pablo Lozano-Sanchez , Marco Caffio , Frank Marken

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (SciVal)

Abstract

Molecular recognition and sensing can be coupled to interfacial capacitance changes on graphene foam surfaces linked to double layer effects and coupled to enhanced quantum capacitance. 3D graphene foam film electrodes (Gii-Sens; thickness approximately 40 μm; roughness factor approximately 100) immersed in aqueous buffer media exhibit an order of magnitude jump in electrochemical capacitance upon adsorption of a charged molecular receptor based on pyrene-appended boronic acids (here, 4-borono-1-(pyren-2-ylmethyl)pyridin-1-ium bromide, or abbreviated T1). This pyrene-appended pyridinium boronic acid receptor is employed here as a molecular receptor for lactate. In the presence of lactate and at pH 4.0 (after pH optimization), the electrochemical capacitance (determined by impedance spectroscopy) doubles again. Lactic acid binding is expressed with a Hillian binding constant (Klactate = 75 mol–1 dm3 and α = 0.8 in aqueous buffer, Klactate = 460 mol–1 dm3 and α = 0.8 in artificial sweat, and Klactate = 340 mol–1 dm3 and α = 0.65 in human serum). The result is a selective molecular probe response for lactic acid with LoD = 1.3, 1.4, and 1.8 mM in aqueous buffer media (pH 4.0), in artificial sweat (adjusted to pH 4.7), and in human serum (pH adjusted to 4.0), respectively. The role of the pyrene-appended boronic acid is discussed based on the double layer structure and quantum capacitance changes. In the future, this new type of molecular capacitance sensor could provide selective enzyme-free analysis without analyte consumption for a wider range of analytes and complex environments.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1565-1574
Number of pages10
JournalACS Sensors
Volume9
Issue number3
Early online date6 Mar 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Mar 2024

Funding

S.M.W. thanks EPSRC (DTP support) and Integrated Graphene Ltd. for scholarship support. T.D.J. wishes to thank the Royal Society for a Wolfson Research Merit Award and the Open Research Fund of the School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Henan Normal University for support (2020ZD01). The XPS data collection was performed at the EPSRC (grants EP/Y023587/1, EP/Y023609/1, EP/Y023536/1, EP/Y023552/1, and EP/Y023544/1) National Facility for XPS (“HarwellXPS”).

FundersFunder number
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research CouncilEP/Y023587/1, EP/Y023609/1, EP/Y023536/1, EP/Y023552/1, EP/Y023544/1
Henan Normal University2020ZD01
Royal Society

Keywords

  • graphene foam
  • lactate sensor
  • molecular capacitance
  • quantum capacitance
  • wearable sensor

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Bioengineering
  • Instrumentation
  • Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
  • Process Chemistry and Technology

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