2D materials in electrochemical sensors for in vitro or in vivo use
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2020-08-10Referencia bibliográfica
2D materials in electrochemical sensors for in vitro or in vivo use. RE Munteanu, PS Moreno, M Bramini, S Gáspár. 2021, Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 413 (3), 701-725
Resumen
Individual cells and cell populations are at the present time investigated with a myriad of analytical tools. While most of them are
commercially available, some of these analytical tools are just emerging from research laboratories and are in the developmental
phase. Electrochemical sensors which allow the monitoring of low molecular weight compounds released (and / or uptaken) by
cells are among these emerging tools. Such sensors are increasingly built using 2D materials (e.g. graphene-based materials,
transition metal dichalcogenides, etc.) with the aim of conferring better analytical performances to these devices. The present
work critically reviews studies published during the last 10 years describing electrochemical sensors made with 2D materials and
exploited to monitor small compounds (e.g. H2O2, ·NO, glucose, etc.) in living biological systems. It also discusses the very few
2D material-based electrochemical sensors which are wearable or usable in vivo. Finally, the present work includes a specific
section about 2D material biocompatibility, a fundamental requirement for 2D material-based sensor applications in vitro and
in vivo. As such, the review provides a critical view on the state of the art of electrochemical sensors made with 2D materials and
used at cellular level and it evaluates the possibility that such sensors will be used on / in the human body on a wider scale.





