Abstract

Electrochemical immunosensing, particularly through a metalloimmunoassay, is a promising approach for development of point-of-care (POC) diagnostics devices. This study investigated the structure of dual working electrodes (W1 and W2), used in a silver nanoparticles-labeled sandwich-type immunoassay and silver concentration process, paying special attention to the position of W1 relative to W2. The new structures of the dual working electrodes were fabricated for efficient silver concentration and evaluated experimentally, which showed that the duration of prereduction before current measurement decreased from 480s to 300s by transforming the position of W1 from 1 line to 2 lines or 6 parts. The experimental results were also compared with numerical simulations based on three-dimensional diffusion, and the prereduction step almost followed the three-dimensional diffusion equation. Using numerical simulations, the ideal structures of dual working electrodes were designed based on relationships between the structures and duration of prereduction or the LOD. In the case of 36 lines at an area ratio of W1 to W1+W2 of 1 to 10, the prereduction duration decreased to 96s. The dual working electrodes designed in this study promise to shorten the total analysis time and lower the LOD for POC diagnostics.

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