Abstract
The electrochemiluminescence (ECL) bioassay is prominently carried out with the involvement of the coreactant. To remove the detrimental effects of the coreactant on the ECL of luminophores, herein, a promising ECL immunoassay strategy with biocompatible nanoparticles as the luminophore is proposed, which involves directly and electrochemically oxidizing the luminophore methionine-capped Au (Met@Au) nanocrystals (NCs) without the participation of any coreactant. Met@Au NCs are a kind of n-type nanoparticles, and they can be electrochemically injected with valence band (VB) holes around +0.80 and +1.10 V (vs Ag/AgCl). The electrochemically injected exogenous VB hole can recombine with the endogenous conduction band electron of Met@Au NCs and eventually bring out two coreactant-free and near-infrared ECL processes around 0.80 V (ECL-1) and 1.10 V (ECL-2). The intensity of coreactant-free ECL is primarily determined by the electrochemical oxidation-induced hole-injection process. ECL-2 is considerably stronger than ECL-1 and can be exploited for determining the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) in a sandwich immunoassay procedure with a linear range from 0.1 to 50 pg/mL as well as a limit of detection of 0.03 pg/mL (S/N = 3).
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