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Recent trends in carbon nanotube (CNT)-based biosensors for the fast and sensitive detection of human viruses: a critical review

The current COVID-19 pandemic, with its numerous variants including Omicron which is 50–70% more transmissible than the previously dominant Delta variant, demands a fast, robust, cheap, and easily deployed identification strategy to reduce the chain of transmission, for which biosensors have been sh...

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Autores principales: Meskher, Hicham, Mustansar, Hussain Chaudhery, Thakur, Amrit Kumar, Sathyamurthy, Ravishankar, Lynch, Iseult, Singh, Punit, Han, Tan Kim, Saidur, Rahman
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9926911/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36798507
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2na00236a
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author Meskher, Hicham
Mustansar, Hussain Chaudhery
Thakur, Amrit Kumar
Sathyamurthy, Ravishankar
Lynch, Iseult
Singh, Punit
Han, Tan Kim
Saidur, Rahman
author_facet Meskher, Hicham
Mustansar, Hussain Chaudhery
Thakur, Amrit Kumar
Sathyamurthy, Ravishankar
Lynch, Iseult
Singh, Punit
Han, Tan Kim
Saidur, Rahman
author_sort Meskher, Hicham
collection PubMed
description The current COVID-19 pandemic, with its numerous variants including Omicron which is 50–70% more transmissible than the previously dominant Delta variant, demands a fast, robust, cheap, and easily deployed identification strategy to reduce the chain of transmission, for which biosensors have been shown as a feasible solution at the laboratory scale. The use of nanomaterials has significantly enhanced the performance of biosensors, and the addition of CNTs has increased detection capabilities to an unrivaled level. Among the various CNT-based detection systems, CNT-based field-effect transistors possess ultra-sensitivity and low-noise detection capacity, allowing for immediate analyte determination even in the presence of limited analyte concentrations, which would be typical of early infection stages. Recently, CNT field-effect transistor-type biosensors have been successfully used in the fast diagnosis of COVID-19, which has increased research and commercial interest in exploiting current developments of CNT field-effect transistors. Recent progress in the design and deployment of CNT-based biosensors for viral monitoring are covered in this paper, as are the remaining obstacles and prospects. This work also highlights the enormous potential for synergistic effects of CNTs used in combination with other nanomaterials for viral detection.
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spelling pubmed-99269112023-02-15 Recent trends in carbon nanotube (CNT)-based biosensors for the fast and sensitive detection of human viruses: a critical review Meskher, Hicham Mustansar, Hussain Chaudhery Thakur, Amrit Kumar Sathyamurthy, Ravishankar Lynch, Iseult Singh, Punit Han, Tan Kim Saidur, Rahman Nanoscale Adv Chemistry The current COVID-19 pandemic, with its numerous variants including Omicron which is 50–70% more transmissible than the previously dominant Delta variant, demands a fast, robust, cheap, and easily deployed identification strategy to reduce the chain of transmission, for which biosensors have been shown as a feasible solution at the laboratory scale. The use of nanomaterials has significantly enhanced the performance of biosensors, and the addition of CNTs has increased detection capabilities to an unrivaled level. Among the various CNT-based detection systems, CNT-based field-effect transistors possess ultra-sensitivity and low-noise detection capacity, allowing for immediate analyte determination even in the presence of limited analyte concentrations, which would be typical of early infection stages. Recently, CNT field-effect transistor-type biosensors have been successfully used in the fast diagnosis of COVID-19, which has increased research and commercial interest in exploiting current developments of CNT field-effect transistors. Recent progress in the design and deployment of CNT-based biosensors for viral monitoring are covered in this paper, as are the remaining obstacles and prospects. This work also highlights the enormous potential for synergistic effects of CNTs used in combination with other nanomaterials for viral detection. RSC 2022-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9926911/ /pubmed/36798507 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2na00236a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Meskher, Hicham
Mustansar, Hussain Chaudhery
Thakur, Amrit Kumar
Sathyamurthy, Ravishankar
Lynch, Iseult
Singh, Punit
Han, Tan Kim
Saidur, Rahman
Recent trends in carbon nanotube (CNT)-based biosensors for the fast and sensitive detection of human viruses: a critical review
title Recent trends in carbon nanotube (CNT)-based biosensors for the fast and sensitive detection of human viruses: a critical review
title_full Recent trends in carbon nanotube (CNT)-based biosensors for the fast and sensitive detection of human viruses: a critical review
title_fullStr Recent trends in carbon nanotube (CNT)-based biosensors for the fast and sensitive detection of human viruses: a critical review
title_full_unstemmed Recent trends in carbon nanotube (CNT)-based biosensors for the fast and sensitive detection of human viruses: a critical review
title_short Recent trends in carbon nanotube (CNT)-based biosensors for the fast and sensitive detection of human viruses: a critical review
title_sort recent trends in carbon nanotube (cnt)-based biosensors for the fast and sensitive detection of human viruses: a critical review
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9926911/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36798507
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2na00236a
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