“…Cellulose-based paper, a commodity commonly available in daily life, has many advantages, such as low cost, highly flexibility, light weight, environmental friendliness, and biodegradability. , These superior attributes make the development of single-use disposable paper-based sensors possible, for example, disposable glucose sensors . Optimal candidates for paper-based flexible devices involve various carbon materials, including graphene, carbon nanotube, carbon onion, and activated carbon, owing to their high specific surface areas, high conductivity, and electrochemical stability. − Nanodiamonds (NDs), an allotrope of carbon, have been extensively studied because of their tremendous potential applications in quantum computing, fuel cells, transistors, and biosensors. − However, these NDs electronics are usually embedded in silicon or metal substrate . To date, very few studies have investigated the fabrication of paper-based NDs sensors, , perhaps due to difficulties in both the scalable production of NDs and the integration of NDs electrodes into paper substrates.…”