Abstract

Lactic acid plays an important role as a biochemical indicator for sports medicine and clinical diagnosis. The detection of lactic acid in sweat is a promising technique without any intrusive inconvenience or risk of infection. In this study, we present a selective nonenzymatic amperometric detection method for lactic acid in human sweat utilizing a multi-wall carbon nanotube (MWCNT)-polypyrrole core-shell nanowire. Because polypyrrole is a p-type conducting polymer, onto which anions are exclusively doped, leading to charge transfer, it offers selective detection for lactate anions at a specific potential, while being inert to the neutral and cationic species contained in human sweat. A chronoamperometric study reveals good sensing performance for lactic acid with a high sensitivity of 2.9 μA mM−1 cm−2 and detection limit of 51 μM. Furthermore, the MWCNT-polypyrrole nanowire exhibits excellent selectivity for lactic acid over interfering species, such as sodium chloride, glucose, urea, and riboflavin, which coexist with lactic acid in sweat. Finally, a nonenzymatic amperometric sensor for the selective detection of lactic acid in human sweat is demonstrated on commercial flexible electrodes. The results demonstrate the potential applications of the MWCNT-polypyrrole core-shell nanowire as a nonenzymatic amperometric lactate sensor.

Highlights

  • Lactic acid is an important metabolite in clinical cases because it indicates the status of metabolic impairment under anaerobic conditions

  • We proposed a nonenzymatic electrochemical detection method for lactic acid in human sweat, utilizing an multi-wall carbon nanotube (MWCNT)-polypyrrole core-shell nanowire

  • Polypyrrole was uniformly coated onto the surfaces of MWCNTs with a thickness of 4.7 nm via surface modification and chemical oxidation polymerization

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Summary

Introduction

Lactic acid is an important metabolite in clinical cases because it indicates the status of metabolic impairment under anaerobic conditions. Energy demands that cannot be met by aerobic respiration induce anaerobic metabolism, increasing the concentration of lactic acid in tissue. Levels of lactic acid have been widely used for determining athletic training status and fitness in sports medicine. Lactic acid plays an important role as a biochemical indicator for various diseases and symptoms, such as sepsis, acute cardiac disorders, and lactate acidosis [1]. The normal concentration of lactic acid in human blood is in the range of 0.5~2.2 mM at rest, but this value can increase to over 30 mM during intense physical activity as muscle cells switch to anaerobic metabolism [2,3]

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