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Confined adsorption within nanopatterns as generic means to drive high adsorption efficiencies on affinity sensors

Journal: Sens. Actuator B-Chem., Volume 366, SEP 1

Authors: Beggiato, Matteo; Rastogi, Rishabh; Dupont-Gillain, Christine; Krishnamoorthy, Sivashankar

Organizations: Fonds National de la Recherche (FNR) Luxembourg [C15/MS/10459961]

Keywords: Nanopattern; Adsorption; Self-assembly; Qu a r t z crystal microbalance; Biosensor; Nanoparticle

Miniaturization of the sensor active areas to length scales of the order of the analyte has been sought as means to reduce device footprints, and to capitalize on the novel optical and electronic enhancements that arise at this scale. However, little is known on what to expect of the sensor behaviou r i f the sensor footprints are shrunk to the dimensions of the order of analyte themselves. Ou r results demonstrate the densities and kinetics of adsorption of analyte to significantly increase with decrease in the sensor footprints to dimensions of the order of few multiples of analyte dimensions. Such increase is found to be generic, irrespective of the nature of interactions that drive adsorption, exhibiting qualitative similarity for electrostatic adsorption of nanoparticles, chemisorption of pri-mary oligonucleotides, or complementa r y base pairing with target nucleotides. The carryover of these benefits onto a macroscopic sensor however requires high density nanopatterns exhibiting significant fil l factors withtout compromising inter-feature isolation. The impact of feature dimensions, patter n fi l l factors, analyte concentra-tions, presence of convective flow, or the density of receptor s are investigated using quantitative and real-time measurements of the nanostructure-analyte interactions using nanopatterned QCM sensors. The results indicate significant opportunities for rational design of nanopatterned macroscopic sensors, as wel l as nanoscopic sensors with sensor active areas of the order of analyte dimensions, e.g., electromagnetic hot-spots, or nanowire sensors.