Abstract

This work reports the use of a ternary composite that integrates p-Toluene sulfonic acid doped polyaniline (PANI), chitosan, and reduced graphene oxide (RGO) as the active sensing layer of a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensor. The SPR sensor is intended for application in the non-invasive monitoring and screening of diabetes through the detection of low concentrations of acetone vapour of less than or equal to 5 ppm, which falls within the range of breath acetone concentration in diabetic patients. The ternary composite film was spin-coated on a 50-nm-thick gold layer at 6000 rpm for 30 s. The structure, morphology and chemical composition of the ternary composite samples were characterized by FTIR, UV-VIS, FESEM, EDX, AFM, XPS, and TGA and the response to acetone vapour at different concentrations in the range of 0.5 ppm to 5 ppm was measured at room temperature using SPR technique. The ternary composite-based SPR sensor showed good sensitivity and linearity towards acetone vapour in the range considered. It was determined that the sensor could detect acetone vapour down to 0.88 ppb with a sensitivity of 0.69 degree/ppm with a linearity correlation coefficient of 0.997 in the average SPR angular shift as a function of the acetone vapour concentration in air. The selectivity, repeatability, reversibility, and stability of the sensor were also studied. The acetone response was 87%, 94%, and 99% higher compared to common interfering volatile organic compounds such as propanol, methanol, and ethanol, respectively. The attained lowest detection limit (LOD) of 0.88 ppb confirms the potential for the utilisation of the sensor in the non-invasive monitoring and screening of diabetes.

Highlights

  • Diabetes is a disease that occurs due to improper regulation of human blood sugar [1]

  • The result for the FTIR and UV-Vis characterisation of the ternary composite has been explained in our previous works [21,24]

  • The absorption spectrum of the ternary composite is more related to the spectrum of CSA doped polyaniline dispersed in meta cresol solvent explained previously [25,26]

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetes is a disease that occurs due to improper regulation of human blood sugar [1]. Diabetes is currently diagnosed based on plasma glucose criteria or A1C (glycated haemoglobin) criteria [6]. These methods are invasive, painful, and inconvenient [7]. There is the possibility of contracting diseases and damaging tissues [8]. Some of these methods are expensive, require trained personnel, and feature non-real-time detection and laboratory-restricted usage [9]. These necessitate the need for a real-time and non-invasive means of diagnosing diabetes

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