DocumentCode
598844
Title
Plasma functionalized and patterned single-walled carbon nanotube for covalent attachment based microdevices
Author
Joon-Hyung Jin ; Nam Ki Min
Author_Institution
Department of Electrical Engineering, Korea University, Seoul, Republic of Korea
fYear
2012
fDate
21-24 Aug. 2012
Firstpage
171
Lastpage
174
Abstract
The interface between biomacromolecules and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) is of critical importance in developing effective techniques that provide CNTs with both biomolecular recognition and signal transduction through immobilization. However, the chemical inertness of CNT surfaces poses an obstacle to a wider implementation of CNTs in bioanalytical applications. In this paper, we present a review of our recent research activities related to the covalent attachment of biomacromolecules to plasma-patterned and functionalized carbon nanotube films and their application to the fabrication of electrochemical biosensing microdevices. The SWCNT films were spray-deposited onto a miniaturized three-electrode system on a glass substrate and activated using highly purified atomic oxygen generated in radio-frequency plasma; this introduced oxygen-containing functional groups into the SWCNT surface without fatal loss of the original physicochemical properties of the CNTs. The carboxylated SWCNT electrodes were then selectively modified via amidation or esterification for covalent immobilization of the biomacromolecules. The plasma-treated SWCNT-based sensing electrode had an approximately six times larger effective area than the untreated SWCNT-based electrode, which significantly amplified the amperometric electrochemical signal. Finally, the efficacy of plasma-functionalized SWCNT (pf-SWCNT) as a bio-interface was examined by immobilizing glucose oxidase, Legionella pneumophila (L. pneumophila)-specific antibodies, L. pneumophila-originated deoxyribonucleic acids, and thrombin-specific aptamers on the pf-SWCNT-based three-electrode devices. The pf-SWCNT films were found to support direct covalent immobilization of the above-listed biomacromolecules on the films and to thereby overcome the many drawbacks typically associated with simple physisorption. Thus, pf-SWCNT sensing electrodes on which biomacromolecules were covalently immobilized were found to be chemically stable and hav- a long lifetime.
Keywords
carbon nanotube patterning; covalent immobilization of biomacromolecules; electrochemical biosensor; oxygen plasma functionalization; single-walled carbon nanotube; three-electrode system;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Awareness Science and Technology (iCAST), 2012 4th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Seoul, Korea (South)
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-2111-2
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4673-2110-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/iCAwST.2012.6469608
Filename
6469608
Link To Document