Title :
Microfluidic Three-Electrode Cell Array for Low-Current Electrochemical Detection
Author :
Triroj, Napat ; Lapierre-Devlin, Melissa A. ; Kelley, Shana O. ; Beresford, Roderic
Author_Institution :
Eng. Div., Brown Univ., Providence, RI
Abstract :
This paper reports the implementation and calibration of a microscopic three-electrode electrochemical sensor integrated with a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microchannel to form a rapid prototype chip technology that is used to develop sensing modules for biomolecular signals. The microfluidic/microelectronic fabrication process yields identical, highly uniform, and geometrically well-defined microelectrodes embedded in a microchannel network. Each three-microelectrode system consists of a Au working electrode with a nominal surface area of 9 mum2, a Cl2 plasma-treated Ag/AgCl reference electrode, and a Au counter electrode. The patterned electrodes on the glass substrate are aligned and irreversibly bonded with a PDMS microchannel network giving a channel volume of 72 nL. The electrokinetic properties and the diffusion profile of the microchannels are investigated under electrokinetic flow and pressure-driven flow conditions. Cyclic voltammetry of 10 mM K3 Fe(CN)6 in 1 M KNO3 demonstrates that the electrode responses in the cell are characterized by linear diffusion. The voltammograms show that the system is a quasi-reversible redox process, with heterogeneous rate constants ranging from 3.11 to 4.94times10-3 cm/s for scan rates of 0.1-1 V/s. The current response in the cell is affected by the adsorption of the electroactive species on the electrode surface. In a low-current DNA hybridization detection experiment, the electrode cell is modified with single-stranded thiolated DNA. The electrocatalytic reduction of 27 muM Ru(NH3)6 3+ in a solution containing 2 mM Fe(CN)6 3- is measured before and after the exposure of the electrode cell to a 500-nM target DNA sample. The preliminary result showing an increase in the peak current response demonstrates the hybridization-based detection of a complementary target DNA sequence
Keywords :
DNA; biological techniques; biosensors; electrochemical sensors; gold; lab-on-a-chip; microelectrodes; microfluidics; molecular biophysics; silver; silver compounds; Ag-AgCl; Au; DNA hybridization detection experiment; adsorption; biomolecular signals; cyclic voltammetry; diffusion profile; electroactive species; electrokinetic flow; electrokinetic properties; glass substrate; linear diffusion; low-current electrochemical detection; microchannel network; microelectrodes; microelectronic fabrication; microfluidic fabrication; microfluidic three-electrode cell array; microscopic three-electrode electrochemical sensor; plasma-treated reference electrode; polydimethylsiloxane microchannel; pressure-driven flow conditions; quasireversible redox process; rapid prototype chip technology; single-stranded thiolated DNA; voltammograms; Biosensors; Calibration; DNA; Electrodes; Electrokinetics; Gold; Microchannel; Microfluidics; Microscopy; Prototypes; DNA hybridization detection; microfluidic/microelectronic fabrication; plasma-treated Ag/AgCl reference electrode; three-electrode system; ultrasmall microelectrode;
Journal_Title :
Sensors Journal, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/JSEN.2006.884444