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PANI-Based Wearable Electrochemical Sensor for pH Sweat Monitoring

Authors :
Rosalinda Inguanta
Sonia Carbone
Chiara D’Agostino
Francesco Lopresti
Antonio Vilasi
Bernardo Patella
Alan O'Riordan
Claudia Torino
Maria Giuseppina Bruno
Francesca Mazzara
Giuseppe Aiello
Mazzara F.
Patella B.
D'agostino C.
Bruno M.G.
Carbone S.
Lopresti F.
Aiello G.
Torino C.
Vilasi A.
O'riordan A.
Inguanta R.
Source :
Chemosensors, Volume 9, Issue 7, Chemosensors, Vol 9, Iss 169, p 169 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2021.

Abstract

Nowadays, we are assisting in the exceptional growth in research relating to the development of wearable devices for sweat analysis. Sweat is a biofluid that contains useful health information and allows a non-invasive, continuous and comfortable collection. For this reason, it is an excellent biofluid for the detection of different analytes. In this work, electrochemical sensors based on polyaniline thin films deposited on the flexible substrate polyethylene terephthalate coated with indium tin oxide were studied. Polyaniline thin films were abstained by the potentiostatic deposition technique, applying a potential of +2 V vs. SCE for 90 s. To improve the sensor performance, the electronic substrate was modified with reduced graphene oxide, obtained at a constant potential of −0.8 V vs. SCE for 200 s, and then polyaniline thin films were electrodeposited on top of the as-deposited substrate. All samples were characterized by XRD, SEM, EDS, static contact angle and FT-IR/ATR analysis to correlate the physical-chemical features with the performance of the sensors. The obtained electrodes were tested as pH sensors in the range from 2 to 8, showing good behavior, with a sensitivity of 62.3 mV/pH, very close to a Nernstian response, and a reproducibility of 3.8%. Interference tests, in the presence of competing ions, aimed to verify the selectivity, were also performed. Finally, a real sweat sample was collected, and the sweat pH was quantified with both the proposed sensor and a commercial pH meter, showing an excellent concordance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22279040
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chemosensors
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....59e904a349aa769859c16a307609d900
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/chemosensors9070169