Abstract

Glucose‐sensing photonic crystals are promising for the significant advance of continuous glucose monitoring systems due to the naked‐eye colorimetric readouts and noninvasive detection of diabetes, but the long response time hampers their practical applications. Here, for the first time probes of photonic nanochains (PNCs) are demonstrated that are capable of continuously and reversibly sensing glucose concentration ([glucose]) variation within seconds by color change without power consumption, much faster by 2–3 orders of magnitude than previous ones. They are comprised of 1D equidistant arrays of magnetic nanoparticles enveloped by tens‐of‐nanometer‐thick phenylboronic acid‐functionalized hydrogels, and fabricated by developing selective concentration polymerization of monomers in binary microheterogeneous solvents of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and H2O. In this process, both 3‐acrylamido phenylboronic acid (AAPBA) and N‐2‐hydroxyethyl acrylamide (HEAAm) are preferentially dissolved in the small volume of free DMSO concentrated in the vicinity of poly vinylpyrrolidone coated Fe3O4 colloidal nanoparticles (Fe3O4@PVP), yielding Fe3O4@PVP@poly(AAPBA‐co‐HEAAm) PNCs after UV irradiation under magnetic field. The PNCs in phosphate buffered solution have a wavelength‐shift range up to 130 nm when [glucose] changes from 0 to 20 × 10−3 m. The results can facilitate real‐time glucose monitoring and provide an alternative to produce functional organic–inorganic nanostructures.

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