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Alexey P. Soldatkin

Researcher at National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

Publications -  66
Citations -  2771

Alexey P. Soldatkin is an academic researcher from National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biosensor & Glucose oxidase. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 63 publications receiving 2592 citations. Previous affiliations of Alexey P. Soldatkin include École centrale de Lyon & Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv.

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Development of highly selective and stable potentiometric sensors for formaldehyde determination.

TL;DR: Two types of biosensors developed on the basis of pH-sensitive field effect transistor as a transducer demonstrate a high selectivity to formaldehyde with no potentiometric response to primary alcohols, including methanol, or glycerol and glucose.
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Amperometric enzyme biosensors: Past, present and future

TL;DR: In this article, three groups of the amperomettic biosensors such as unmediated, mediated and based on direct transfer of electrons have been thoroughly described, and their advantages and disadvantages were shown.
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Highly selective microbiosensors for in vivo measurement of glucose, lactate and glutamate

TL;DR: The microbiosensors developed are now used in vivo and, as an example, the data obtained with the glucose biosensor is reported, which exhibited also negligible influences from interfering compounds at their physiological concentrations.
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Enzyme biosensors based on ion-selective field-effect transistors.

TL;DR: The key theoretical principles of the work on ion-selective field-effect transistor connected with their application in bioanalytical practice, some specifics of modern microtechnologies for their creation, and measurement schemes with set-ups are discussed.
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Application of urease conductometric biosensor for heavy-metal ion determination

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used conductometric biosensors consisting of interdigitated gold electrodes and enzyme membranes formed on their sensitive parts for quantitative estimation of general water pollution with heavy-metal ions.