Abstract

A novel glucose biosensor was fabricated. The first layer of the biosensor was polythionine, which was formed by the electrochemical polymerisation of the thionine monomer on a glassy carbon electrode. The remaining layers were coated with chitosan-MWCNTs, GOx, and the chitosan-PTFE film in sequence. The MWCNTs embedded in FAD were like “conductive wires” connecting FAD with electrode, reduced the distance between them and were propitious to fast direct electron transfer. Combining with good electrical conductivity of PTH and MWCNTs, the current response was enlarged. The sensor was a parallel multi-component reaction system (PMRS) and excellent electrocatalytic performance for glucose could be obtained without a mediator. The glucose sensor had a working voltage of −0.42 V, an optimum working temperature of 25°C, an optimum working pH of 7.0, and the best percentage of polytetrafluoroethylene emulsion (PTFE) in the outer composite film was 2%. Under the optimised conditions, the biosensor displayed a high sensitivity of 2.80 µA mM−1 cm−2 and a low detection limit of 5 µM (S/N = 3), with a response time of less than 15 s and a linear range of 0.04 mM to 2.5 mM. Furthermore, the fabricated biosensor had a good selectivity, reproducibility, and long-term stability, indicating that the novel CTS+PTFE/GOx/MWCNTs/PTH composite is a promising material for immobilization of biomolecules and fabrication of third generation biosensors.

Highlights

  • Glucose has always been an analyte that has received much attention because of its vital effect in clinical and environmental analysis

  • We investigated the step-wise immobilizations of PTH, Multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs), glucose oxidase (GOx), and chitosan-polytetrafluoroethylene emulsion (PTFE) composite films onto a glassy carbon electrode to build a biosensor for measuring glucose

  • We successfully introduced a promising glucose biosensor based on the immobilization of GOx onto a MWCNTs/ PTH nanocomposite film

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Summary

Introduction

Glucose has always been an analyte that has received much attention because of its vital effect in clinical and environmental analysis. We investigated the step-wise immobilizations of PTH, MWCNTs, GOx, and chitosan-PTFE composite films onto a glassy carbon electrode to build a biosensor for measuring glucose. During the process of thionine electropolymerisation (Figure 3), the currents of a pair of reversible redox peaks increased gradually with increasing scan numbers, which can be attributed to the redox reaction of the PTH at the electrode.

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