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Nanostructuration of thin films for applying in enzyme based biosensors

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Author(s):
Vinícius Romero Gonçales
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Conjunto das Químicas (IQ e FCF) (CQ/DBDCQ)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Susana Ines Cordoba de Torresi; Fernando Battaglini; Mauro Bertotti; Lauro Tatsuo Kubota; Paulo Teng An Sumodjo
Advisor: Susana Ines Cordoba de Torresi; Maria Regina Alcantara
Abstract

Nowadays, the challenges in the development of biosensors cover various aspects such as the need to improve the interface between the substrate and the biological material, the efficiency of the chemical signal transduction in a measurable one, the response time, the compatibility with biological matrices and the integration of different biological recognition elements in a single device, in order to perform detections of different analytes. In this context, the development of nanoscience has created very attractive features to optimize the aspects described above. Consequently, the present work studies the build up of nanostructured transducers that can operate more efficiently than the corresponding bulk materials (systems non-nanostructured). In one of the approaches used, a hybrid transducer consisting of copper hexacyanoferrate/polypyrrole (CuHCNFe/Ppy) had its electrochemical properties combined with the morphological and electronic properties of a felt decorated with cup-stacked type carbon nanotubes (felt/CSCNT) for development of a H2O2 sensor. Felt/CSCNT is a hydrophilic conductive mesh that allows a uniform dispersion of the hybrid transducer. This feature, coupled with the improvement of electroactive surface and with the electronic interaction among the CuHCNFe/Ppy and carbon nanotubes have created a favorable platform for the construction of a glucose biosensor. In a second strategy, polystyrene spheres with diameters of 300, 460, 600 and 800 nm were used as templates for the formation of macroporous CuHCNFe/Ppy films. The transducers were used to detect H2O2 in order to correlate the importance of pore size with the obtained analytical performance. Unlike expected, porous and bulk transducers presented very similar analytical performances, which led to a consideration of the thermodynamic properties of curved surfaces, the wettability of porous materials and the influence of electrochemical kinetics during the use of porous systems. Such platforms have also been successfully applied in the preparation of glucose and choline biosensors. Finally, it was possible to synthesize nanostructured transducers through the immobilization of Prussian blue layers and CuHCNFe inside the cavities of mesoporous TiO2 films (pore diameters of 13, 20 and 40 nm). The obtained results demonstrated the possibility of modulating the performance of H2O2 sensors according to the pore diameter and the amount of immobilized transducer. The union of the obtained analytical results with scanning electron microscopy data showed the importance of confinement effect on the transducers performances. In addition, spectroscopic data in the visible region were essential to correlate the presence of structural defects with the material reactivity. In the end, these platforms were used for the formulation of choline biosensors. (AU)