From diagnosis of life-threatening diseases to detection of biological agents in warfare or terrorist attacks, biosensors are becoming a critical part of modern life. Many recent biosensors have incorporated carbon nanotubes as sensing elements, while a growing body of work has begun to do the same with the emergent nanomaterial graphene, which is effectively an unrolled nanotube. With this widespread use of carbon nanomaterials in biosensors, it is timely to assess how this trend is contributing to the science and applications of biosensors. This Review explores these issues by presenting the latest advances in electrochemical, electrical, and optical biosensors that use carbon nanotubes and graphene, and critically compares the performance of the two carbon allotropes in this application. Ultimately, carbon nanomaterials, although still to meet key challenges in fabrication and handling, have a bright future as biosensors.
The remarkable electrocatalytic properties and small size of carbon nanotubes make them ideal for achieving direct electron transfer to proteins, important in understanding their redox properties and in the development of biosensors. Here, we report shortened SWNTs can be aligned normal to an electrode by self-assembly and act as molecular wires to allow electrical communication between the underlying electrode and redox proteins covalently attached to the ends of the SWNTs, in this case, microperoxidase MP-11. The efficiency of the electron transfer through the SWNTs is demonstrated by electrodes modified with tubes cut to different lengths having the same electron-transfer rate constant.
Carbon
and graphene quantum dots (CQDs and GQDs), known as zero-dimensional
(0D) nanomaterials, have been attracting increasing attention in sensing
and bioimaging. Their unique electronic, fluorescent, photoluminescent,
chemiluminescent, and electrochemiluminescent properties are what
gives them potential in sensing. In this Review, we summarize the
basic knowledge on CQDs and GQDs before focusing on their application
to sensing thus far followed by a discussion of future directions
for research into CQDs- and GQD-based nanomaterials in sensing. With
regard to the latter, the authors suggest that with the potential
of these nanomaterials in sensing more research is needed on understanding
their optical properties and why the synthetic methods influence their
properties so much, into methods of surface functionalization that
provide greater selectivity in sensing and into new sensing concepts
that utilize the virtues of these nanomaterials to give us new or
better sensors that could not be achieved in other ways.
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