Photoelectrochemical (Bio)sensors for Biological, Food, and Environmental Analysis
A special issue of Chemosensors (ISSN 2227-9040). This special issue belongs to the section "(Bio)chemical Sensing".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 April 2023) | Viewed by 25305
Special Issue Editors
2. School of Chemical Engineering and Technology, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510276, China
Interests: electrochemical sensors and materials; wearable devices
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Photoelectrochemical (PEC) (bio)sensors are a new class of analytical devices operating on the basis of the PEC properties of materials. Because of their merits of such as high sensitivity, easy miniaturization, and simple instruments, PEC (bio)sensors have found widespread applications in disease diagnostics, biomedical research, food security, environmental monitoring, etc.
In the presence of nucleic acids (or their artificial analogues), antibodies, aptamers, molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs), enzymes, synthetic substrates, and some other affinity receptors as the recognition elements, PEC (bio)sensors can be applied to the (bio)sensing of various biological targets (e.g., nucleic acids, proteins, enzymes, antigens, exosomes, and pathogenic microorganisms), metabolites (e.g., ATP, amino acids, neurotransmitters, and hormones), food/beverage/cosmetic ingredients (e.g., vitamins, additives, antioxidants, mineral salts, toxins, and antibiotic/pesticide residues), environmental pollutants (heavy metal ions, pesticide residues, and toxic gases).
In recent years, great effort has been focused on the development of functional materials with desirable PEC properties (e.g., excellent light-harvesting ability, high photoelectric conversion efficiency, and high mobility of charge carriers). Various photoactive materials include metal oxides (e.g., TiO2, ZnO, and WO3), metal chalcogenides (e.g., CdS, Bi2S3, and CuS), quantum dots, organic small molecules, and organic polymers. To overcome the possible defects of a single material, versatile composites have been constructed to heterojunctions for improving PEC response sensitivity and selectivity to a specific analyte of interest.
This Special Issue of Chemosensors focusses on the design and development of PEC (bio)sensors, especially their applications in biological, food, and environmental analysis. We look forward to receiving papers on the relevant topics.
Dr. Li Niu
Dr. Qiong Hu
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- Photoelectrochemical (bio)sensors
- Novel materials for photoelectrochemical (bio)sensing
- Novel photoelectrochemical (bio)sensing principles
- Immunosensors
- Imprinted polymers
- Functional nanomaterials
- Semiconductor nanomaterials
- Heterojunctions
- Aptasensors
- Disease diagnostics
- Environmental analysis
- Food analysis
- Air pollutants
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