Lignosulfonate in situ-modified reduced graphene oxide biosensors for the electrochemical detection of dopamine†
Abstract
Lignosulfonate (LS), a biomass by-product from sulfite pulping and the paper-making industry, which has many excellent characteristics, such as renewable, environmentally friendly, amphiphilic nature, and especially the abundant content of hydrophilic functional groups in its architecture, making it highly reactive and can be used as a sensitive material in sensors to show changes in electrical signals. Herein, we report a one-step in situ method to fabricate lignosulfonate-modified reduced graphene oxide (LS–rGO) green biosensors, which can be used for the sensitive electrochemical detection of dopamine without interference from uric acid and ascorbic acid. The modified LS molecular layers act as chemical-sensing layers, while the rGO planar sheets function as electric-transmitting layers in the as-assembled dopamine biosensors. After the in situ-decoration of the LS modifier, the sensing performance of LS–rGO for the detection of dopamine was much higher than that of the pure rGO electrode, and the highest current response of the biosensor toward dopamine greatly improved from 11.2 μA to 52.07 μA. The electrochemical sensitivity of the modified biosensor was optimized to be 0.43 μA μM−1, and the detection limit was as low as 0.035 μM with a wide linear range (0.12–100 μM), which is better than that of most previously reported metal- and organic-based modified graphene electrodes. The newly designed biosensor has unique advantages including rapid, stable, sensitive and selective detection of dopamine without interference, providing a facile pathway for the synthesis of green resource-derived sensing materials instead of the traditional toxic and expensive modifiers.