Abstract

Age structure in most developed countries is changing fast as the average lifespan is increasing significantly, calling for solutions to provide improved treatments for age-related neurological diseases and disorders. In order to address these problems, a reliable way of recording information about neurotransmitters from in vitro and in vivo applications is needed to better understand neurological diseases and disorders as well as currently used treatments. Likewise, recent developments in medicine, especially with the opioid crisis, are demanding a swift move to personalized medicine to administer patient needs rather than population-wide averages. In order to enable the so-called personalized medicine, it is necessary to be able to do measurements in vivo and in real time. These actions require sensitive and selective detection of different analytes from very demanding environments. Current state-of-the-art materials are unable to provide sensitive and selective detection of neurotransmitters as well as the required time resolution needed for drug molecules at a reasonable cost. To meet these challenges, we have utilized different metals to grow carbon nanomaterials and applied them for sensing applications showing that there are clear differences in their electrochemical properties based on the selected catalyst metal. Additionally, we have combined atomistic simulations to support optimizing materials for experiments and to gain further understanding of the atomistic level reactions between different analytes and the sensor surface. With carbon nanostructures grown from Ni and Al + Co + Fe hybrid, we can detect dopamine, ascorbic acid, and uric acid simultaneously. On the other hand, nanostructures grown from platinum provide a feasible platform for detection of H2O2 making them suitable candidates for enzymatic biosensors for detection of glutamate, for example. Tetrahedral amorphous carbon electrodes have an ability to detect morphine, paracetamol, tramadol, and O-desmethyltramadol. With carbon nanomaterial-based sensors, it is possible to reach metal-like properties in sensing applications using only a fraction of the metal as seed for the material growth. We have also seen that by using nanodiamonds as growth catalyst for carbon nanofibers, it is not possible to detect dopamine and ascorbic acid simultaneously, although the morphology of the resulting nanofibers is similar to the ones grown using Ni. This further indicates the importance of the metal selection for specific applications. However, Ni as a continuous layer or as separate islands does not provide adequate performance. Thus, it appears that metal nanoparticles combined with fiber-like morphology are needed for optimized sensor performance for neurotransmitter detection. This opens up a new research approach of application-specific nanomaterials, where carefully selected metals are integrated with carbon nanomaterials to match the needs of the sensing application in question.

Highlights

  • Based on both European and US sources [1, 2], more than a quarter of the population suffers from different neurological disorders

  • In the analysis and discussion of the physicochemical results from the new carbonaceous nanomaterials, we will utilize our most well-studied material as the reference, a 7-nm-thick tetrahedral amorphous carbon (ta-C) layer deposited on 20-nm Ti adhesion layer deposited on Si wafer

  • Electrochemical performance of the ta-C films towards DA and ascorbic acid (AA) is shown in Fig. 1 for reference and there is both the lack of sensitivity and selectivity when only one carbon allotrope is utilized

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Summary

Introduction

Based on both European and US sources [1, 2], more than a quarter of the population suffers from different neurological disorders These figures are expected to increase as the population’s age structure is changing with the increasing average lifespan. In addition to the above, the current opioid crisis raises questions if the population-wide averages for deciding the dosing for pain medication have been the right approach. Both problems could be solved by realization of personalized. In addition to the complex carbon-metal composite structures resulting from the growth process of these carbon nanostructures, their morphology is reported to have a significant role in the performance

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