Among all developed 2D materials, phosphorene is in notable
demand
in recent times due to its distinctive electrical performance in biomedical
applications. Zero-dimensional phosphorene quantum dot semiconducting
material is a promising candidate that initiated a platform for fabricating
high-performance electrical biosensors. In this study, we have successfully
developed the material reduced phosphorene quantum dots (rPhQDs) of
an average size of 2.1–2.3 nm using a simple hydrothermal technique.
This material can be utilized as an electrical bio-sensing platform
to detect uric acid in aqueous media as well as in real samples such
as human blood serum and artificial urine. Biodegradable polymer composites
of rPhQDs show unique current–voltage properties. They can
be used to fabricate electrical devices that selectively detect uric
acid in human blood serum and urine samples in the linear range of
1–5 μM. The corresponding detection limits for aqueous
media, human blood serum, and artificial urine are 0.809, 0.5292,
and 1.065 μM, respectively. We have investigated the driving
force responsible for this selective electrical sensing and found
that improvement of ionic movement in the presence of analytes plays
a prominent role that can be established by measuring the transport
number of the nano-bio-composite film. The device has the potential
for successful detection of uric acid quantities in human blood serum
and artificial urine.