CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde...

23
CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR

Transcript of CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde...

Page 1: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

CHEM 395Bioanalytical Chemistry

InstructorProf. James F. Rusling

PresenterAshwin Bhirde

CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR

Page 2: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

• Carbon Nanotubes… a brief introduction

• Types of CNTs

• Applications of CNTs

• Biosensors

• SWCNT biosensors

• Summary

• References

CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR

Page 3: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

What are carbon nanotubes?

Carbon nanotubes are carbon cylinders made up of one or more rolled up graphene sheets, closed off at either end by half spheres in the shape of a soccer ball.

Page 4: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

Salient features of CNTs

• 100 times stronger than Steel and 1/6th the weight of steel.(Tensile strength value, 63 GPa, exceeds that of any reported value for any type of material. Applications for very light-weight, high-strength cables and composites, where the carbon nanotubes are the load-carrying element.)

• Electrical conductivity as high as copper, thermal conductivity as high as diamond.

• Avgerage diameter of 1.2 – 1.4 nm (10000 times smaller than a human hair).

Page 5: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

Depending on the way the graphene sheet is rolled up

Types of Carbon nanotubes

Page 6: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.
Page 7: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.
Page 8: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

Synthesis of CarbonNanotubes

Arc Discharge

Laser Ablation

Chemical Vapor Deposition

Purification of CarbonNanotubes

Acid treatment

SEC

Annealing

Page 9: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

Applications of CarbonNanotubes

Nanotubes can be opened and filled with materials such as biological molecules, raising the possibility of applications in biotechnology, like TDD.

Page 10: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.
Page 11: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

Application of CNTs in the FET devices

Page 12: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

BIOSENSOR

A biosensor is a bioanalytical device consisting of 2 components a bioreceptor and a transducer. The bioreceptor is a biomolecule that recognizes the target analyte whereas the transducer converts the recognition event into a measurable signal.

Page 13: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

BIOSENSOR

• Electrical contacting of redox enzymes with electrodes.

• Selecting the suitable bioreceptor.

• Type of immobilization.

• Appropriate transducer element.

Page 14: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

SWCNTs are oxidised, which develop carboxylic ends.

The carboxylic ends so formed are used for further functionalization with various biomolecules .

Using carbodimiide coupling chemistry amine groups of biomolecules ( like DNA,Protiens,Enzymes.. ) can be coupled to the carboxylic moities of the CNTs .

Functionalization of SWCNT

Page 15: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

Functionalization of SWCNT

Page 16: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

SWCNT Glucose Biosensor

Page 17: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

Comparative Faradic Responses

Faradic response of a GC macroelectrode before and after modification with SWCNTs.

Page 18: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

SWCNT enzyme coated at the

sidewalls

SWCNT enzyme coated at the

endcaps

Page 19: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.
Page 20: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.
Page 21: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

Summary

Carbon nanotubes are rolled up graphene sheets .

Biosensors are bioanalytical devices consisting of a bioreceptor and a transducer.

CNT plays dual role in a biosensor both as immobilization matrices and as electron mediator.

The high conductivity and high surface-area of CNTs make them a better material for bionanoelectroanalytical devices.

Page 22: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

References

“Biomolecule-Functionalized Carbon Nanotubes: Applications in Nanobioelectronics”, Eugenii Katz and Itamar Willner .

“Chemical and Biochemical Sensing with modified Single Walled Carbon Nanotubes”, Jason J Davis, Karl S. Coleman, Bobak R. Azamian, Claire B. Bagshaw and Malcolm L. Green.

“Functionalization of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes”, Andreas Hirsch.

"Peroxidase activity of enzymes bound to the ends of single-wall carbon nanotube forest electrodes“Xin Yu, Debjit Chattopadhyay, Izabela Galeska, Fotis Papadimitrakopoulos, and James F. Rusling .

“Mediated amperometric immunosensing using single Walled carbon nanotube forests” Ma´ire O’Connor, Sang Nyon Kim, Anthony J. Killard, Robert J. Forster,Malcolm R. Smyth, Fotios Papadimitrakopoulos and James F. Rusling.

Page 23: CHEM 395 Bioanalytical Chemistry Instructor Prof. James F. Rusling Presenter Ashwin Bhirde CarbonNanotube BIOSENSOR.

QuesTions ?QuesTions ?