Paper-based Nanobiosensors: Diagnostics Going Simple
Arben Merkoçi, ICREA Professor And Group Leader, Catalan Institute of Nanoscience And Nanotechnology
Biosensors field is progressing rapidly and the demand for cost
efficient platforms is the key factor for their success. Physical,
chemical and mechanical properties of cellulose in both micro and
nanofiber-based networks combined with their abundance in nature or easy
to prepare and control procedures are making these materials of great
interest while looking for cost-efficient and green alternatives for
device production technologies. Both paper and nanopaper-based
biosensors are emerging as a new class of devices with the objective to
fulfill the “World Health Organization” requisites to be ASSURED:
affordable, sensitive, specific, user-friendly, rapid and robust,
equipment free and deliverable to end-users. How to design simple
paper-based biosensor architectures? How to tune their analytical
performance upon demand? How one can ‘marriage’ nanomaterials such as
metallic nanoparticles, quantum dots and even graphene with paper and
what is the benefit? How we can make these devices more robust,
sensitive and with multiplexing capabilities? Can we bring these low
cost and efficient devices to places with low resources, extreme
conditions or even at our homes? Which are the perspectives to link
these simple platforms and detection technologies with mobile phone
communication? I will try to give responses to these questions through
various interesting applications related to protein, DNA and even
contaminants detection all of extreme importance for diagnostics,
environment control, safety and security.
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