Highly Sensitive Electrochemical Non-Enzymatic Uric Acid Sensor Based on Cobalt Oxide Puffy Balls-like Nanostructure

Early-stage uric acid (UA) abnormality detection is crucial for a healthy human. With the evolution of nanoscience, metal oxide nanostructure-based sensors have become a potential candidate for health monitoring due to their low-cost, easy-to-handle, and portability. Herein, we demonstrate the synth...

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Dades bibliogràfiques
Autors principals: Nagal, Vandana, Masrat, Sakeena, Khan, Marya, Alam, Shamshad, Ahmad, Akil, Alshammari, Mohammed B., Bhat, Kiesar Sideeq, Novikov, Sergey M., Mishra, Prabhash, Khosla, Ajit, Ahmad, Rafiq
Altres autors: Singapore-MIT Alliance in Research and Technology (SMART)
Format: Article
Publicat: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2023
Accés en línia:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/148808
Descripció
Sumari:Early-stage uric acid (UA) abnormality detection is crucial for a healthy human. With the evolution of nanoscience, metal oxide nanostructure-based sensors have become a potential candidate for health monitoring due to their low-cost, easy-to-handle, and portability. Herein, we demonstrate the synthesis of puffy balls-like cobalt oxide nanostructure using a hydrothermal method and utilize them to modify the working electrode for non-enzymatic electrochemical sensor fabrication. The non-enzymatic electrochemical sensor was utilized for UA determination using cyclic voltammetry (CV) and differential pulse voltammetry (DPV). The puffy balls-shaped cobalt oxide nanostructure-modified glassy carbon (GC) electrode exhibited excellent electro-catalytic activity during UA detection. Interestingly, when we compared the sensitivity of non-enzymatic electrochemical UA sensors, the DPV technique resulted in high sensitivity (2158 &micro;A/mM.cm<sup>2</sup>) compared to the CV technique (sensitivity = 307 &micro;A/mM.cm<sup>2</sup>). The developed non-enzymatic electrochemical UA sensor showed good selectivity, stability, reproducibility, and applicability in the human serum. Moreover, this study indicates that the puffy balls-shaped cobalt oxide nanostructure can be utilized as electrode material for designing (bio)sensors to detect a specific analyte.