Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (171)
- Conference Proceeding (23)
- Part of a Book (10)
- Book (1)
Has Fulltext
- no (205) (remove)
Keywords
- Field-effect sensor (3)
- capacitive field-effect sensor (3)
- field-effect sensor (3)
- tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (3)
- LAPS (2)
- gold nanoparticles (2)
- (Bio)degradation (1)
- Biomolecular logic gate (1)
- CNOT (1)
- Capacitive field-effect (1)
- Capacitive model (1)
- Chemical imaging (1)
- Coat protein (1)
- C–V method (1)
- DNA (1)
- DNA biosensor (1)
- DNA hybridization (1)
- Electrolyte–insulator–semiconductor (1)
- Enzyme biosensor (1)
- Enzyme coverage (1)
- Enzyme logic gate (1)
- Enzyme nanocarrier (1)
- Field effect (1)
- Field-effect biosensor (1)
- Field-effect device (1)
- Glucose biosensor (1)
- Glucose oxidase (1)
- Gold nanoparticle (1)
- Impedance spectroscopy (1)
- Label-free detection (1)
- Layer-by-layer adsorption (1)
- Light-addressable potentiometric sensor (1)
- Multianalyte detection (1)
- Penicillin (1)
- Poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (1)
- Poly(d,l-lacticacid) (1)
- Potentiometry (1)
- Real-time monitoring (1)
- TMV adsorption (1)
- Ta₂O₅ gate (1)
- Tobacco mosaic virus (1)
- Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (1)
- XOR (1)
- acetoin (1)
- aminooctanethiol (1)
- barium strontium titanate (1)
- bi-enzyme biosensor (1)
- biosensor (1)
- capacitive EIS sensor (1)
- capacitive field-effect biosensor (1)
- capacitive model (1)
- contactless conductivity sensor (1)
- control gate (1)
- detection of charged macromolecules (1)
- electrolyte-insulator-semiconductor capacitors (1)
- enzymatic (bio)degradation (1)
- enzyme cascade (1)
- enzyme immobilization (1)
- enzyme-logic gate (1)
- equivalent circuit (1)
- glucose oxidase (GOx) (1)
- high-k material (1)
- horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (1)
- hydrogen peroxide (1)
- impedance spectroscopy (1)
- in-situ monitoring (1)
- lable-free detection (1)
- multi-functional material (1)
- multianalyte detection (1)
- nanoparticle coverage (1)
- on-chip integrated addressable EISCAP sensors (1)
- penicillinase (1)
- plant virus detection (1)
- poly(d, l-lactic acid) (1)
- polystyrene sulfonate (1)
- turnip vein clearing virus (TVCV) (1)
- urease (1)
The coupling of ligand-stabilized gold nanoparticles with field-effect devices offers new possibilities for label-free biosensing. In this work, we study the immobilization of aminooctanethiol-stabilized gold nanoparticles (AuAOTs) on the silicon dioxide surface of a capacitive field-effect sensor. The terminal amino group of the AuAOT is well suited for the functionalization with biomolecules. The attachment of the positively-charged AuAOTs on a capacitive field-effect sensor was detected by direct electrical readout using capacitance-voltage and constant capacitance measurements. With a higher particle density on the sensor surface, the measured signal change was correspondingly more pronounced. The results demonstrate the ability of capacitive field-effect sensors for the non-destructive quantitative validation of nanoparticle immobilization. In addition, the electrostatic binding of the polyanion polystyrene sulfonate to the AuAOT-modified sensor surface was studied as a model system for the label-free detection of charged macromolecules. Most likely, this approach can be transferred to the label-free detection of other charged molecules such as enzymes or antibodies.
The on-chip integration of multiple biochemical sensors based on field-effect electrolyte-insulator-semiconductor capacitors (EISCAP) is challenging due to technological difficulties in realization of electrically isolated EISCAPs on the same Si chip. In this work, we present a new simple design for an array of on-chip integrated, individually electrically addressable EISCAPs with an additional control gate (CG-EISCAP). The existence of the CG enables an addressable activation or deactivation of on-chip integrated individual CG-EISCAPs by simple electrical switching the CG of each sensor in various setups, and makes the new design capable for multianalyte detection without cross-talk effects between the sensors in the array. The new designed CG-EISCAP chip was modelled in so-called floating/short-circuited and floating/capacitively-coupled setups, and the corresponding electrical equivalent circuits were developed. In addition, the capacitance-voltage curves of the CG-EISCAP chip in different setups were simulated and compared with that of a single EISCAP sensor. Moreover, the sensitivity of the CG-EISCAP chip to surface potential changes induced by biochemical reactions was simulated and an impact of different parameters, such as gate voltage, insulator thickness and doping concentration in Si, on the sensitivity has been discussed.
Immunosorbent turnip vein clearing virus (TVCV) particles displaying the IgG-binding domains D and E of Staphylococcus aureus protein A (PA) on every coat protein (CP) subunit (TVCVPA) were purified from plants via optimized and new protocols. The latter used polyethylene glycol (PEG) raw precipitates, from which virions were selectively re-solubilized in reverse PEG concentration gradients. This procedure improved the integrity of both TVCVPA and the wild-type subgroup 3 tobamovirus. TVCVPA could be loaded with more than 500 IgGs per virion, which mediated the immunocapture of fluorescent dyes, GFP, and active enzymes. Bi-enzyme ensembles of cooperating glucose oxidase and horseradish peroxidase were tethered together on the TVCVPA carriers via a single antibody type, with one enzyme conjugated chemically to its Fc region, and the other one bound as a target, yielding synthetic multi-enzyme complexes. In microtiter plates, the TVCVPA-displayed sugar-sensing system possessed a considerably increased reusability upon repeated testing, compared to the IgG-bound enzyme pair in the absence of the virus. A high coverage of the viral adapters was also achieved on Ta2O5 sensor chip surfaces coated with a polyelectrolyte interlayer, as a prerequisite for durable TVCVPA-assisted electrochemical biosensing via modularly IgG-assembled sensor enzymes.
Electrolyte-insulator-semiconductor capacitors (EISCAP) belong to field-effect sensors having an attractive transducer architecture for constructing various biochemical sensors. In this study, a capacitive model of enzyme-modified EISCAPs has been developed and the impact of the surface coverage of immobilized enzymes on its capacitance-voltage and constant-capacitance characteristics was studied theoretically and experimentally. The used multicell arrangement enables a multiplexed electrochemical characterization of up to sixteen EISCAPs. Different enzyme coverages have been achieved by means of parallel electrical connection of bare and enzyme-covered single EISCAPs in diverse combinations. As predicted by the model, with increasing the enzyme coverage, both the shift of capacitance-voltage curves and the amplitude of the constant-capacitance signal increase, resulting in an enhancement of analyte sensitivity of the EISCAP biosensor. In addition, the capability of the multicell arrangement with multi-enzyme covered EISCAPs for sequentially detecting multianalytes (penicillin and urea) utilizing the enzymes penicillinase and urease has been experimentally demonstrated and discussed.