Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (479)
- Conference Proceeding (45)
- Part of a Book (9)
- Book (2)
- Other (2)
Language
- English (537) (remove)
Keywords
- Biosensor (7)
- LAPS (4)
- hydrogen peroxide (4)
- Field-effect sensor (3)
- Label-free detection (3)
- Light-addressable potentiometric sensor (3)
- biosensors (3)
- Bacillus atrophaeus (2)
- Capacitive field-effect sensor (2)
- Raman spectroscopy (2)
- Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (2)
- acetoin (2)
- capacitive field-effect sensors (2)
- field-effect sensor (2)
- sterilisation (2)
- tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (2)
- (Bio)degradation (1)
- Bacillus atrophaeus spores (1)
- Bio-Sensors (1)
- Bioabsorbable (1)
- Biomolecular logic gate (1)
- Biophoton (1)
- Biosensorik (1)
- CNOT (1)
- Calorimetric gas sensor (1)
- Capacitive field-effect (1)
- Capacitive model (1)
- Chemical images (1)
- Chemical imaging (1)
- Chemical imaging sensor (1)
- Chemical sensor (1)
- Coat protein (1)
- C–V method (1)
- DNA (1)
- DNA biosensor (1)
- DNA hybridization (1)
- DPA (dipicolinic acid) (1)
- Dehydrogenase (1)
- Diaphorase (1)
- EIS capacitive sensor (1)
- Electrolyte–insulator–semiconductor (1)
- Enzymatic biosensor (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)
- Gas sensor (1)
- Glucose biosensor (1)
- Glucose oxidase (1)
- Gold nanoparticle (1)
- Gold nanoparticles (1)
- Heavy metal detection (1)
- Hydrogen peroxide (1)
- I3S 2005 (1)
- ISFET (1)
- Impedance spectroscopy (1)
- International Symposium on Sensor Science (1)
- Layer-by-layer adsorption (1)
- LbL films (1)
- Light-addressable Potentiometric Sensor (1)
- MEMS (1)
- MOS (1)
- Multianalyte detection (1)
- Multicell (1)
- Multiplexing (1)
- Nano Materials (1)
- Nanomaterial (1)
- Nanopartikel (1)
- Nanostructuring (1)
- Nanotechnologie (1)
- Nanotechnology ; Microelectronics ; Biosensors ; Superconductor ; MEMS (1)
- Negative impedance convertor (1)
- O2 plasma (1)
- Organic light-emitting diode display (1)
- Penicillin (1)
- Plant virus (1)
- Poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (1)
- Poly(d,l-lacticacid) (1)
- Polyimide (1)
- Polylactide acid (1)
- Potentiometry (1)
- Real-time monitoring (1)
- Resistive temperature detector (1)
- Resonance-mode measurement (1)
- Silk fibroin (1)
- Simultaneous determination (1)
- Sn₃O₄ (1)
- Sterilisation process (1)
- Supraleiter (1)
- TMV adsorption (1)
- Ta₂O₅ gate (1)
- Tobacco mosaic virus (1)
- Wafer (1)
- XOR (1)
- Zeta potential (1)
- acetoin reductase (1)
- alcoholic beverages (1)
- amperometric biosensors (1)
- annealing (1)
- artificial olfactory image (1)
- atomic layer deposition (1)
- barium strontium titanate (1)
- bioburdens (1)
- biocompatible (1)
- biocompatible materials (1)
- biodegradabl (1)
- biodegradable electronic devices (1)
- biosensor (1)
- calorimetric gas sensor (1)
- calorimetric gas sensor;hydrogen peroxide;wireless sensor system (1)
- capacitive electrolyte–insulator–semiconductor sensors (1)
- capacitive field-effect biosensor (1)
- capacitive field-effect sensor (1)
- capillary micro-droplet cell (1)
- carbon electrodes (1)
- catalytic decomposition (1)
- catalytic metal (1)
- chemical sensor (1)
- contactless conductivity sensor (1)
- electrolyte-insulator semiconductor sensor (EIS) (1)
- electronic nose (1)
- encapsulation materials (1)
- endospores (1)
- enzymatic (bio)degradation (1)
- enzymatic biosensor (1)
- enzyme cascade (1)
- enzyme immobilization (1)
- fibroin (1)
- field-effect structure (1)
- gas sensor (1)
- glucose (1)
- glucose oxidase (GOx) (1)
- graphene oxide (1)
- heavy metals (1)
- high-k material (1)
- horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (1)
- hydroxylation (1)
- immobilization (1)
- impedance spectroscopy (1)
- in-situ monitoring (1)
- lable-free detection (1)
- layer expansion (1)
- layer-by-layer technique (1)
- light-addressable potentiometric sensor (1)
- light-addressing technologies (1)
- metal-oxide-semiconductor structure (1)
- multi-functional material (1)
- nanobelts (1)
- nanomaterials (1)
- novel photoexcitation method (1)
- optical sensor setup (1)
- optical spore trapping (1)
- optical trapping (1)
- organic PVC membranes (1)
- organosilanes (1)
- pH sensors (1)
- pattern-size reduction (1)
- penicillin (1)
- penicillinase (1)
- photoelectrochemistry (1)
- plant virus detection (1)
- plug-based microfluidic device (1)
- poly(d, l-lactic acid) (1)
- polyaniline (1)
- scanned light pulse technique (1)
- self-aligned patterning (1)
- silanization (1)
- spatial resolution (1)
- sterility tests (1)
- sterilization (1)
- sterilization conditions (1)
- sterilization efficacy (1)
- sterilization methods (1)
- surface functionalization (1)
- temperature (1)
- thin-film microsensors (1)
- tilted constant illumination (1)
- titanium dioxide photoanode (1)
- turnip vein clearing virus (TVCV) (1)
- ultrathin gate insulators (1)
- validation methods (1)
- visualization (1)
- wafer-level testing (1)
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (537) (remove)
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a novel human infectious disease provoked by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Currently, no specific vaccines or drugs against COVID-19 are available. Therefore, early diagnosis and treatment are essential in order to slow the virus spread and to contain the disease outbreak. Hence, new diagnostic tests and devices for virus detection in clinical samples that are faster, more accurate and reliable, easier and cost-efficient than existing ones are needed. Due to the small sizes, fast response time, label-free operation without the need for expensive and time-consuming labeling steps, the possibility of real-time and multiplexed measurements, robustness and portability (point-of-care and on-site testing), biosensors based on semiconductor field-effect devices (FEDs) are one of the most attractive platforms for an electrical detection of charged biomolecules and bioparticles by their intrinsic charge. In this review, recent advances and key developments in the field of label-free detection of viruses (including plant viruses) with various types of FEDs are presented. In recent years, however, certain plant viruses have also attracted additional interest for biosensor layouts: Their repetitive protein subunits arranged at nanometric spacing can be employed for coupling functional molecules. If used as adapters on sensor chip surfaces, they allow an efficient immobilization of analyte-specific recognition and detector elements such as antibodies and enzymes at highest surface densities. The display on plant viral bionanoparticles may also lead to long-time stabilization of sensor molecules upon repeated uses and has the potential to increase sensor performance substantially, compared to conventional layouts. This has been demonstrated in different proof-of-concept biosensor devices. Therefore, richly available plant viral particles, non-pathogenic for animals or humans, might gain novel importance if applied in receptor layers of FEDs. These perspectives are explained and discussed with regard to future detection strategies for COVID-19 and related viral diseases.
The artificial olfactory image was proposed by Lundström et al. in 1991 as a new strategy for an electronic nose system which generated a two-dimensional mapping to be interpreted as a fingerprint of the detected gas species. The potential distribution generated by the catalytic metals integrated into a semiconductor field-effect structure was read as a photocurrent signal generated by scanning light pulses. The impact of the proposed technology spread beyond gas sensing, inspiring the development of various imaging modalities based on the light addressing of field-effect structures to obtain spatial maps of pH distribution, ions, molecules, and impedance, and these modalities have been applied in both biological and non-biological systems. These light-addressing technologies have been further developed to realize the position control of a faradaic current on the electrode surface for localized electrochemical reactions and amperometric measurements, as well as the actuation of liquids in microfluidic devices.
Field-effect capacitive electrolyte-insulator-semiconductor (EIS) sensors functionalised with citrate-capped gold nanoparticles (AuNP) have been used for the electrostatic detection of macromolecules by their intrinsic molecular charge. The EIS sensor detects the charge changes in the AuNP/macromolecule hybrids induced by the adsorption or binding events. A feasibility of the proposed detection scheme has been exemplary demonstrated by realising EIS sensors for the detection of poly-D-lysine molecules.
A field-effect biosensor employing tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) particles as scaffolds for enzyme immobilization is presented. Nanotubular TMV scaffolds allow a dense immobilization of precisely positioned enzymes with retained activity. To demonstrate feasibility of this new strategy, a penicillin sensor has been developed by coupling a penicillinase with virus particles as a model system. The developed field-effect penicillin biosensor consists of an Al-p-Si-SiO₂-Ta₂O₅-TMV structure and has been electrochemically characterized in buffer solutions containing different concentrations of penicillin G. In addition, the morphology of the biosensor surface with virus particles was characterized by scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy methods. The sensors possessed a high penicillin sensitivity of ~ 92 mV/dec in a nearly-linear range from 0.1 mM to 10 mM, and a low detection limit of about 50 µM. The long-term stability of the penicillin biosensor was periodically tested over a time period of about one year without any significant loss of sensitivity. The biosensor has also been successfully applied for penicillin detection in bovine milk samples.