MRS Meetings and Events

 

SB07.06.05 2022 MRS Spring Meeting

Sniffing Bacteria with a Carbon-Dot Artificial Nose

When and Where

May 10, 2022
5:00pm - 7:00pm

Hawai'i Convention Center, Level 1, Kamehameha Exhibit Hall 2 & 3

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Nitzan Shauloff1,Raz Jelinek1

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev1

Abstract

Nitzan Shauloff1,Raz Jelinek1

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev1
Continuous, real-time monitoring and identification of bacteria through detection of microbially-emitted volatile molecules are highly sought albeit elusive goals. We introduce an artificial nose for sensing and distinguishing vapor molecules, based upon recording the capacitance of interdigitated electrodes (IDEs) coated with carbon dots (C-dots) exhibiting different polarities. Exposure of the C-dot-IDEs to volatile molecules induced rapid capacitance changes that were intimately dependent upon the polarities of both gas molecules and the electrode-deposited C-dots. We deciphered the mechanism of capacitance transformations, specifically substitution of electrode-adsorbed water by gas molecules, with concomitant changes in capacitance related to both the polarity and dielectric constants of the vapor molecules tested. The C-dot-IDE gas sensor exhibited excellent selectivity, aided by application of machine learning algorithms. The capacitive C-dot-IDE sensor was employed to continuously monitor microbial proliferation, discriminating among bacteria through detection of distinctive “volatile compound fingerprint” for each bacterial species. The C-dot-IDE platform is robust, reusable, readily assembled from inexpensive building blocks and constitutes a versatile and powerful vehicle for gas sensing in general, bacterial monitoring in particular.

Keywords

surface chemistry

Symposium Organizers

Symposium Support

Gold
United Well Technologies(China) Limited

Bronze
ACS Nano | ACS Publications
Beijing LADO Technology Co., Ltd.
Journal of Nanobiotechnology | Springer Nature
MilliporeSigma
Ocean Nanotech LLC
WellSIM Biomedical Technologies, Inc.

Session Chairs

Weibo Cai
Jie Zheng

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Sodium Chloride Nanoparticle as a Therapeutic for Bladder Cancer

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Developing Upconverting Nanoparticle-Based Force Sensors for In Vivo Gastrointestinal Imaging

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Sniffing Bacteria with a Carbon-Dot Artificial Nose

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Nanoconjugates to Enhance PDT–Mediated Cancer Immunotherapy by Targeting the Indoleamine–2,3–Dioxygenase Pathway

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Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature