Abstract

An ultrasensitive dual-signal ratiometric electrochemical sensor was developed for creatinine detection utilizing silver nanoparticles (Ag) with intrinsic self-calibration afforded by iron-nickel bimetallic Prussian blue (FeNiPBA) analogues. The Ag@FeNiPBA exhibits two redox signals corresponding to the Ag+/Ag and Fe3+/Fe2+ systems. Adding chloride (Cl-) solution increases the anodic current of the Ag/Ag system significantly due to the formation of silver chloride through solid-state electrochemistry. While the anodic current of the Ag/Ag system decreases in the presence of creatinine due to the competitive reaction, the Fe/Fe system's anodic current remains the same, which enables a ratiometric response. Under optimized conditions, the response ratio (IAg/IFe) decreases while the creatinine concentration increases linearly between 0.015 and 140 μM, with 0.004 μM as a good detection limit (S/N = 3). These results demonstrate superior performance over previously reported methods for electrochemical creatinine determination. The high sensitivity arises from the signal amplification of the Ag/AgCl solid-state electrochemistry, while the selectivity originates from the specific interaction between Ag+ and creatinine. The Ag@FeNiPBA hybrid can quantify creatinine in real samples with good recoveries. This work opens up new opportunities for applying dual-signal nanostructures to develop electrochemical sensors for (bio)molecule detection.

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