Facile synthesis of Au@Ag-hemin decorated reduced graphene oxide sheets: A novel peroxidase mimetic for ultrasensitive colorimetric detection of hydrogen peroxide and glucose

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Abstract

Herein we report the facile synthesis of a quaternary nanocomposite material (hemin-silver coated gold-graphene oxide) and evaluate its efficacy as a novel peroxidase mimetic. A strong synergistic coupling between the various components involved results in an excellent catalytic performance of this nanocomposite. A comparison of the different morphologies of the silver coated gold particles strongly indicates a greater sensitivity of the nanostar morphology over the nanoparticle morphology owing to its high surface-to-volume ratio. Furthermore, the immobilization of hemin and silver coated gold nanostars on a graphene oxide sheet framework imposes a nanoscale confinement, effectively augmenting the overall catalytic performance of the composite. The nanocomposite followed typical Michaelis-Menten theory and electrochemical analysis suggested facilitation of accelerated electron transfer between TMB and H2O2. A KM value of 2.75 mM-1 suggested a high affinity of the nanocomposite towards TMB. Furthermore, a 2.8 times increase in the maximum reaction rate compared to HRP established the high catalytic activity of the nanocomposite. The nanocomposite demonstrates a nanomolar range sensitivity towards hydrogen peroxide and glucose (limit of detection = 1.26 nM and 425 nM). The nanocomposites have also been employed to develop a paper-based point-of-care diagnostic device. The device has been utilized for detection of glucose in human blood serum samples with satisfactory results.

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Kumar, S., Bhushan, P., & Bhattacharya, S. (2017). Facile synthesis of Au@Ag-hemin decorated reduced graphene oxide sheets: A novel peroxidase mimetic for ultrasensitive colorimetric detection of hydrogen peroxide and glucose. RSC Advances, 7(60), 37568–37577. https://doi.org/10.1039/c7ra06973a

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