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Electrochemical Sensors, a Bright Future in the Fabrication of Portable Kits in Analytical Systems

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TLDR
The mechanism and different examples of DNA, enzymatic and electro-catalytic methods for electroanalytical determination of drug, food and environmental compounds are described.
Abstract
Analysis of food, pharmaceutical, and environmental compounds is an inevitable issue to evaluate quality of the compounds used in human life. Quality of drinking water, food products, and pharmaceutical compounds is directly associated with human health. Presence of forbidden additives in food products, toxic compounds in water samples and drugs with low quality lead to important problems for human health. Therefore, attention to analytical strategy for investigation of quality of food, pharmaceutical, and environmental compounds and monitoring presence of forbidden compounds in materials used by humans has increased in recent years. Analytical methods help to identify and quantify both permissible and unauthorized compounds present in the materials used in human daily life. Among analytical methods, electrochemical methods have been shown to have more advantages compared to other analytical methods due to their portability and low cost. Most of big companies have applied this type of analytical methods because of their fast and selective analysis. Due to simple operation and high diversity of electroanalytical sensors, these types of sensors are expected to be the future generation of analytical systems. Therefore, many scientists and researchers have focused on designing and fabrication of electroanalytical sensors with good selectivity and high sensitivity for different types of compounds such as drugs, food, and environmental pollutants. In this paper, we described the mechanism and different examples of DNA, enzymatic and electro-catalytic methods for electroanalytical determination of drug, food and environmental compounds.

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Citations
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Flow-Through Acetylcholinesterase Sensor with Replaceable Enzyme Reactor

TL;DR: Easy mounting, low cost of replaceable parts of the cell and satisfactory analytical and metrological characteristics made the AChE biosensor a promising future application as a point-of-care or point- of-demand device outside of a chemical laboratory.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Multi-walled carbon nanotubes-ionic liquid-carbon paste electrode as a super selectivity sensor: application to potentiometric monitoring of mercury ion(II).

TL;DR: The proposed electrode was successfully used as an indicator for potentiometric determination of Hg(II) in dental amalgam and water samples and the electrode has a short response time and can be used for at least 55 days without any considerable divergence in potentials.
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Electrochemical DNA Hybridization Biosensors

TL;DR: The many different approaches in which electrochemical methods are used to detect DNA hybridization, as the basis of a DNA biosensors, are reviewed in this article, which can be divided into two broad classes, approaches where a redox active species is used as a label and those where changes in the DNA interface are monitored electrochemically without the use of any labels.
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Enzymatic glucose biosensor based on ZnO nanorod array grown by hydrothermal decomposition

TL;DR: In this paper, a glucose biosensor based on glucose oxidase (GOx) immobilized on ZnO nanorod array grown by hydrothermal decomposition was presented, which showed a linear range from 0.01to3.45mM and an experiment limit of detection of 0.1mM.
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Simultaneous voltammetric determination of acetaminophen, aspirin and caffeine using an in situ surfactant-modified multiwalled carbon nanotube paste electrode

TL;DR: In this paper, a carbon nanotube paste electrode modified in situ with Triton X 100 was developed for the individual and simultaneous determination of acetaminophen (ACOP), aspirin (ASA) and caffeine (CF).
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