MOF derived core-shell CuO/C with temperature-controlled oxygen-vacancy for real time analysis of glucose

J Nanobiotechnology. 2022 Dec 1;20(1):507. doi: 10.1186/s12951-022-01715-z.

Abstract

Introducing oxygen-vacancy into the surface of the non-enzymatic sensor is supposed to be an effective way to improve inherently low catalytic activity and specificity of non-enzymatic sensors. In this work, CuO/C was synthesized at different temperatures using metal-organic frameworks as sacrificial templates to receive additional content of oxygen-vacancy. The product with the highest oxygen vacancy was found at 400 °C (named CuO/C-400 °C), which increased catalytically active sites and enhanced the charge-transfer efficiency. The sensing performance was afterward explored by amperometry under an optimal applied potential at 0.5 V (vs. SCE), presenting a broad detection range from 5.0 µM to 25.325 mM (R2 = 0.9998) with a sensitivity of 244.71 µA mM- 1 cm- 2, and a detection limit of 1 µM. Furthermore, the reliability and selectivity of CuO/C-400 °C sensors were extensively explored in the presence of artificial serum/saliva samples with gradient glucose concentrations. The human blood samples were also detected with high recoveries compared with the clinical Hexokinase method. Hence, the prepared CuO/C-400 °C sensor with a broad detection range and high selectivity can be applied for the diabetes diagnosis ex vivo without further dilution for real-time analysis in practical applications.

Keywords: Direct glucose sensing; High-temperature pyrolysis; Metal-organic frameworks; Non-enzymatic sensor; Oxygen-vacancy.

MeSH terms

  • Glucose*
  • Humans
  • Oxygen*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Temperature

Substances

  • Oxygen
  • Glucose
  • cupric oxide