Vijayaraj
Kathiresan
a,
Sakda
Jampasa
bc,
Thirumal
Vediyappan
d,
Dharuman
Venkataraman
e,
Viwat
Vchirawongkwin
*f and
Orawon
Chailapakul
*a
aElectrochemistry and Optical Spectroscopy Unit, Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand. E-mail: corawon@chula.ac.th
bFuturistic Science Research Center, School of Science, Walailak University, Nakhon Si Thammarat 80160, Thailand
cResearch Center for Theoretical Simulation and Applied Research in Bioscience and Sensing, Walailak University, Nakhon Si Thammarat 80160, Thailand
dDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Yeungnam University, Gyeongsan-si, Gyeongbuk-do 38541, Republic of Korea
eMolecular Electronics Laboratory, Department of Bioelectronics and Biosensors, Alagappa University, Karaikudi 630 003, Tamil Nadu, India
fDepartment of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand. E-mail: Viwat.V@Chula.ac.th
First published on 26th September 2025
Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) is a critical clinical biomarker for evaluating thyroid function and is essential in diagnosing and monitoring related hormonal disorders. However, the development of point-of-care diagnostic devices for the early detection of TSH-associated diseases remains challenging, particularly due to constraints in measurement methodologies in resource-limited settings. This research describes an effective electrochemical immunosensor developed from a novel seamless three-dimensional (3D) Ti3C2Tx (MXene)–carbon nanotube (CNT) nanocomposite, specifically engineered for the ultrasensitive and label-free detection of low TSH concentrations. The MXene–CNT nanocomposite was synthesized using the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method, and its physical characteristics and electrochemical sensing capabilities were examined. The unique synergetic properties of the MXene–CNT nanocomposite enhance antibody immobilization, expand the sensor's surface area (0.119 cm2), provide additional binding sites, and improve electrical conductivity, leading to superior sensitivity and stability of the biosensor. With a label-free format, the redox mediator signal decreased significantly in response to varying concentrations of TSH, attributable to the insulating immunocomplexes formed between anti-TSH and TSH on the MXene–CNT-modified disposable electrode. The method achieved a dynamic linear range of 0.1–10
000 pg mL−1, with a detection limit of 0.03 pg mL−1, showcasing high selectivity against interferents. Importantly, this study presents the first successful electrochemical detection of TSH in artificial serum using the CVD-grown MXene–CNT nanocomposite immunosensor, underscoring its potential for real-sample analysis in complex biological environments. The current study opens new avenues for leveraging the CVD-grown MXene–CNT nanocomposites in designing and developing molecular diagnosis-based electrochemical and related biosensors.
Recently, various TSH monitoring tools, such as radioimmunoassay (RIA),9 chemiluminescent immunoassay (CLIA),10 liquid chromatography,11 and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS),12 have been developed. However, these systems face obstacles such as a lack of miniaturization, including high costs and lengthy processes. Developing simple, rapid, and sensitive handheld electrochemical devices for TSH testing remains a significant challenge. Thanks to innovative electrochemical biosensing devices such as micro- and nano-fabrication, lab-on-a-chip development is driven by advanced biomolecular electronics that facilitate rapid testing, integration, and automation.13 Among immunosensors, electrochemical immunosensors are powerful screening tools that are highly sensitive, specific, affordable, convenient, and efficient.14 They are useful for food quality assessment, environmental control, clinical analyses, and medical diagnostics.15 Antibody–antigen detection modifies the transducer's surface characteristics (current or voltage) without reporter labels, such as radioactive elements, fluorescent dyes, aptamers, or enzymes. This approach holds promise in electrochemical immunosensing due to its straightforward and cost-effective diagnostic process. A key aspect of assembling electrochemical immunosensors is immobilizing antibodies or antigens as bioreceptors. Various methods, including physical or chemical adsorption, have been proposed for binding them to diagnostic devices.16 Recently, researchers have enhanced detection signals using advanced nanomaterials in electrochemical immunosensors to identify protein indicators from clinical samples.17,18 By employing nanomaterials with improved conductivity, biocompatibility, stability, and a large surface area, electrochemical immunosensor devices achieve superior results in clinical analyses. This technique boosts detection sensitivity and monitoring of biological indicators, aiding in the early identification of clinical biomarkers.18–20 Tracking real-world samples is crucial for timely medical interventions. Numerous materials, such as mesoporous silica materials,21 conducting carbon polymers,22 graphene composites,23 carbon nanotube (CNT) composites,24 Au–Ag nanoparticles,25 and molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) composites,26 have been utilized as transducer components in developing immunosensors or immunoassay techniques.
MXenes are a newly discovered class of two-dimensional (2D) transition metal carbides and nitrides that have seen rising demand since their first production in 2011 by etching a precursor Mn+1AXn phase. In this context, M represents a d-block transition metal, A indicates a group IIIA–VIA element, and X denotes carbon and/or nitrogen.27 Selective etching can yield structured MXene (Mn+1AXnTx), with surface functional groups (–F, –O, and –OH) represented by Tx. Approximately 100 MXene compounds have been theoretically recognized, primarily based on experimental findings.28 MXenes are compelling materials for transduction due to their large active surface area, layered structure, chemically modifiable nature, tailored electrical properties, high hydrophilicity, stability, and biocompatibility. They show significant potential in electrochemistry, including electrocatalysis, batteries, supercapacitors, sensors, and biosensors.29,30 Recent studies have focused on electrochemical biosensors for detecting clinical biomarkers.31 MXene surfaces may negatively affect the contact interface due to electron deficiency at the flake surface, leading to limited selectivity, reduced conductivity, and low carrier mobility. Restacking and reduction related to electro-active sensitive areas can occur due to weak van der Waals forces.32 Additionally, modifying sensor surfaces is essential to enhance the MXene stability in biosensing applications, as they suffer from oxidation in solutions and aggregation in biological environments.32,33 Despite their excellent conductivity, versatile surface chemistry, and abundant active sites, MXenes continue to encounter several issues that limit their practical use in electrochemical biosensing. Major challenges include nanosheet restacking, which decreases accessible surface area, surface oxidation, reduced conductivity and stability, poor stability in aqueous and biological media, and nonspecific adsorption that affects selectivity. To address these problems, researchers suggest approaches such as hybridizing with conductive nanomaterials like graphene and CNTs to prevent restacking and enhance charge transfer; functionalizing surfaces with polymers, biomolecules, or heteroatom dopants to improve sensitivity and selectivity; engineering heterostructures and adjusting interlayer spacing to allow better ion access; and applying antifouling coatings to increase stability and biocompatibility. Recent advances demonstrate that integrating MXenes into hybrid or nanostructured architectures can significantly boost sensitivity, reproducibility, and detection limits, as shown by recent reports.34–37 These approaches offer promising ways to overcome the inherent limitations of MXenes and develop highly sensitive, reliable, next-generation MXene-based biosensing platforms. While various techniques aim to regulate the binding position of antibodies on MXene surfaces, achieving overall directional control remains challenging.
Inspired by this perspective, MXene has emerged as a promising material, with several scientists expressing enthusiasm for MXene-based electrochemical transduction devices. This growing interest is primarily attributed to MXene materials, particularly Ti3C2Tx, which show high electrical conductivity and versatile surface chemistry, making them ideal for electrochemical composites.38 Adding conductive fillers like CNTs helps prevent MXene restacking and further improves electrical performance. Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) can also enhance conductivity and provide antibacterial properties, which are beneficial for wearable and biomedical applications.39,40 MXene facilitates the production of nanosheets and carbon materials that enhance the mechanical strength and electro-catalytic and conductive properties.41 Integrating MXene with CNT-derived nanocomposites significantly increases the number of active sites and surface area, thereby enhancing electroanalytical detection capabilities.42,43 MXene–CNT devices enhance signal intensity, electrocatalytic activity, and stability, which boosts biosensor sensitivity for diagnosis.44,45 Additionally, MXene-based functional materials demonstrate that –F, –O, and –OH groups on MXene promote adhesion to synthetic and natural surfaces (hydroxyl) through hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interactions, forming linkages with Ti.46 Recent reports have described combined MXene–CNT-based composite materials through physical mixing to create electrochemical sensors, DNA sensors, and immunosensors.47–49 However, interaction between MXene and CNT composite materials can lead to limited electrical conductivity due to nonohmic contact, and structural flaws. In contrast, the MXene–CNT nanocomposite produced via CVD shows increased electrical conductivity, better interaction sites, and reduced contact resistance. The potential use of covalent surface modification antibody–antigen binding on the seamless 3D MXene–CNT nanocomposite in label-free electrochemical immunosensors has not been addressed.
In this study, we propose a novel electrochemical immunosensor based on a 3D seamless MXene–CNT nanocomposite, produced through the CVD growth of CNT on MXene, for the sensitive and rapid detection of trace levels of TSH. The conductive MXene promotes electron transfer, while CNTs enhance ion migration by preventing MXene re-stacking and toxic effects, thereby increasing adaptability to biological settings. The synergistic effect of the MXene–CNT nanocomposite boosts biosensor sensitivity by amplifying the electronically transmitted signal through improved antibody affinity, showcasing its potential as a transformative electronic tool for TSH antigen monitoring. This research aims to create a reliable framework for screening interconnected 3D conductive transducer surfaces to address the limitations of portable diagnostic techniques. It emerges as a strong candidate for early diagnosis of trace-level TSH through efficient label-free electrochemical immunosensing in artificial blood serum samples, marking a first in the field.
:
1 (v/v) mixture of HNO3 and H2SO4 to activate their surface, as described in our earlier procedure.51,52 The treated MXene–CNT nanocomposite was evaluated using physical and electrochemical characterization techniques. Fig. S1 shows a schematic illustration of the MXene–CNT nanocomposite synthesized using the CVD method.
:
1 ratio were applied for covalent surface chemistry to the MXene–CNT nanocomposite modified SPGE and left for 1 hour at room temperature (RT) to facilitate the activation process.44 Following this, the EDC–NHS/MXene–CNT/SPGE was treated with 5-μL of anti-TSH (optimized at 10 μg mL−1, sourced from 7.4 pH PBS) and incubated for 1 hour at RT, with a careful rinse using PBS (pH 7.4) afterward. After electrode modification, anti-TSH antibodies were covalently immobilized using EDC–NHS surface chemistry, forming stable amide bonds with carboxyl groups on the MXene–CNT surface to enhance the sensor stability. Subsequently, the remaining active sites on the anti-TSH/EDC–NHS/MXene–CNT/SPGE were blocked for 1 hour at RT using 1% BSA (prepared in 7.4 pH PBS) to prevent non-specific reactions, followed by another rinse with PBS. Finally, the BSA/anti-TSH/EDC–NHS/MXene–CNT/SPGE was treated with various concentrations of 5 μL TSH antigen, incubated for 45 minutes at RT, followed by careful rinsing with PBS, after which the electrochemical responses were measured. Schematic illustration of Ti3C2Tx MXene synthesis via selective etching of Al from the Ti3AlC2 MAX phase, along with the CVD-based synthesis of the MXene–CNT nanocomposite (A), and the fabrication process of the TSH electrochemical immunosensors is illustrated (B) in Scheme 1.
The XRD patterns of MXene and the MXene–CNT nanocomposite are shown in Fig. SI-2, illustrating the crystalline structural changes caused by CNT integration. The pristine MXene exhibits a basal (002) reflection at 8.93° (d ≈ 9.89 Å), signifying expanded interlayer spacing and partial nanosheet exfoliation.54 Higher-order reflections at 16.25° (004) and 18.40° (006) confirm layered stacking, while peaks at 35.20° (103), 41.16° (105), and 76.28° (110/112) demonstrate MXene's crystallinity and structural integrity. During the in situ CVD growth of CNTs on MXene, the nanocomposite displays a shifted basal (002) reflection at 7.44° (d ≈ 11.88 Å), slightly higher than the ∼7.2–7.3° reported by Li et al., indicating further nanosheet delamination and subtle interlayer expansion driven by strong MXene–CNT interactions. Distinct graphitic CNT (002) peaks at 25.37° and 26.51° confirm successful CNT formation and hybridization, consistent with recent reports.55–58 The higher-order 35.20° (103) reflection shows significantly increased intensity compared to pristine MXene, reflecting improved crystallinity. In contrast, the 76.28° (110/112) reflection exhibits a slight decrease, indicating minor structural adjustments at the highest crystallographic planes. These results demonstrate that the MXene–CNT nanocomposite preserves MXene's fundamental crystalline structure while enabling modifications that can boost the electrical conductivity and open avenues for high-performance electrochemical applications.
The FTIR spectrum verified the surface functionalization of pristine MXene, MXene–CNT, and MXene–CNT/Ab surfaces (Fig. 2A). The spectra showed characteristic absorption bands for each surface. For pristine MXene, the peaks at 3300 cm−1 (–OH stretching) and 1638 cm−1 (C
O bending) indicated the presence of hydroxyl and water groups.59 A strong peak at 592 cm−1 was related to Ti–O deformation.60 In the MXene–CNT spectra, new peaks indicated chemical bonds that enhance the functionality and stability, with peaks at 1074 cm−1, 1455 cm−1, and 2930 cm−1 corresponding to C–O and C–H vibrations, and a peak at 2106 cm−1 (C
C) indicating alkyne groups.50 The C
O peak at 1725 cm−1 confirmed the carboxylic modification, which is absent in pristine MXene.61 After covalent antibody immobilization via EDC/NHS surface chemistry, distinct FTIR peaks at 3465 cm−1, 1223 cm−1, 1712 cm−1, 1635 cm−1, and 1561 cm−1 arise due to N–H, C–O, C
O, amide I, and amide II groups, confirming the presence of TSH antibody.59 These results verify MXene–CNT surface antibody immobilization, showing strong potential for biosensing applications.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 2 FTIR spectra of MXene, MXene–CNT, and MXene–CNT/Ab (A). Raman spectra of CNT, MXene, and MXene–CNT (B). | ||
The Raman study provided evidence of MXene, MXene–CNT, and CNT structure and phase changes (Fig. 2B). The Raman spectrum from 100 to 2000 cm−1 showed characteristic peaks of MXene: 156 cm−1, 204 cm−1, 396 cm−1, 515 cm−1, 624 cm−1, 708 cm−1, 1342 cm−1, and 1564 cm−1, correlating with MXene characteristics.62 The CNT grown on MXene and the nanocomposite exhibited similar peak patterns, compared to pure CNT's indistinct peaks, revealing the presence of Ti3C2Tx. The MXene–CNT and pure CNT had broad D band (1340 cm−1) and G band (1590 cm−1) peaks, indicating lattice defects and sp2 hybridization.50,63 The intensity ratios (ID/IG) from the Raman spectra were 0.69 for CNT, 0.49 for MXene, and 0.79 for MXene–CNT, indicating the crystalline carbon lattice structure with minimal defects and high graphitization. This affirms efficient MXene–CNT nanocomposite production, offering active binding sites that make it a promising platform for electrochemical applications.
The XPS characterization examined the surface chemical compositions and element valence states of CNT, MXene, MXene–CNT, and MXene–CNT/Ab. Fig. 3A displays Ti 2p, F 1s, C 1s, O 1s, and N 1s in the full XPS spectrum of CNT, MXene, and MXene modifications. The N 1s spectra show a strong peak at 400.74 eV, indicating that TSH antibodies bind to the MXene–CNT (Fig. 3A). The intensity of this peak decreased in the CNT, MXene, and MXene–CNT spectra (Fig. 3A). TSH antibodies activate via covalent surface chemistry and bind to carboxyl groups on MXene–CNT, ensuring successful attachment.64 The XPS core-level spectra of MXene–CNT revealed an additional Ti peak and increased O intensity compared to CNT (Fig. 3A), confirming a strong interconnection between MXene and CNT.43 The high-resolution C 1s spectra of MXene (Fig. 3B) revealed four deconvoluted peaks: Ti–C (284.07 eV), C
C (284.65 eV), C–OH (286.02 eV), and C
O (288.52 eV). The MXene C
C peak (284.65 eV) remained constant, though its intensity was lower than that on MXene–CNT. The peaks for Ti–C, C–OH, and C
O shift to 283.79 eV, 285.89 eV, and 287.35 eV,61 respectively; the intensity of Ti–C (283.79 eV) diminished for the MXene–CNT, indicating CNT surface growth on MXene. The XPS spectra of MXene–CNT and MXene exhibit additional Ti–C peaks (283.79 eV and 284.07 eV), with shifted intensity compared to CNT, validating the interaction between MXene and CNT.43
Fig. 3C illustrates high-resolution XPS peak fitting for MXene in the O 1s region, with peaks at 530.77 eV, 531.95 eV, and 533.27 eV associated with C–Ti–O, OH/Ox, and C–O.65 The intensities of the C–Ti–O and C–O peaks are higher in MXene than in MXene–CNT; C–O displays greater intensity in MXene than in CNT. After the CVD process, the OH/Ox peak characteristic of MXene–CNT disappeared when compared to MXene. The O 1s spectrum indicates that MXene–CNT has a weaker C–Ti–O signal, with intensity shifting from 531.59 eV to 530.77 eV compared to MXene, with no C–Ti–O peak in CNT due to the consistent CVD growth of the MXene–CNT nanocomposite.
Fig. 3D presents the Ti 2p XPS analysis with four predominant peaks at 458.74 eV, 459.42 eV, 464.35 eV, and 465.32 eV attributed to Ti(II), Ti–O, Ti 2p1/2, and Ti(III) in MXene–CNT and MXene. The MXene–CNT spectrum reveals two new peaks at 454.5 eV and 462.47 eV for Ti–C and Ti–O, with slight displacements compared to MXene. Additionally, peaks for Ti–O are observed at 459.46 eV and 462.47 eV.66 The ensemble of Ti 2p and C 1s peaks of Ti–C indicates MXene's involvement. This finding illustrates that the CVD process produced uniform CNT growth on the MXene interlayer, resulting in robust interfacial bonding and an enriched nanocomposite, enhancing properties that facilitate electron migration at the interface.67
Based on these analyses, the structural integrity, chemical stability, and biocompatibility of the MXene–CNT nanocomposite were ensured by HF-etched MXene, which served as the template for direct CNT growth via CVD. This method improved electrical conductivity and minimized oxidation by stabilizing the MXene sheets within the CNT network. After CNT growth, the composite was treated with HNO3/H2SO4 to introduce surface groups (–OH, –COOH) for biomolecule immobilization, which was confirmed by FTIR analysis. The thorough washing (to neutral pH) and acid treatment eliminated residual HF or fluoride ions. The structural and chemical integrity were verified through XRD, XPS, and Raman analysis, demonstrating preserved MXene crystallinity, characteristic surface terminations (–O, –OH, –F), and no residual etchant traces. Control measurements showed consistent hormone sensing, indicating that oxidation and residual contaminants negatively impact the performance of the MXene–CNT nanocomposite.
| ip = 2.69 × 105n3/2ACD1/2ν1/2 | (1) |
In this equation, ip represents the peak current, n is the number of electrons exchanged, A denotes the electrode's active surface area, D is the diffusion coefficient of the redox species, C refers to the concentration of [Fe(CN)6]3−/4−, and ν is the scan rate. The electro-active surface areas were estimated to be 0.119 cm2 for MXene–CNT/SPGE, 0.085 cm2 for MXene/SPGE, and 0.071 cm2 for bare SPGE, confirming the CVD growth of MXene–CNT as an effective immunosensor interface.
Fig. 4B shows that the EIS characterization of the modified electrodes was performed from 0.1 Hz to 10
000 Hz, with a 5 mV amplitude. The charge transfer resistance (Rct) correlates with the semicircle diameter in the Nyquist plot, reflecting electron transfer kinetics at the interface.51 The MXene–CNT modified SPGE had an Rct of 10.65 kΩ, lower than 12.25 kΩ for the MXene-modified SPGE and 13.71 kΩ for the bare SPGE, indicating rapid electron transfer and increased active sites. Following the assembly of anti-TSH (15.74 kΩ) and target TSH (18.95 kΩ) on the MXene–CNT modified SPGE, the semicircle diameters increased, suggesting higher resistivity for interfacial electron transfer. The Rct values were significantly lower for the MXene–CNT nanocomposite compared to other SPGE types, highlighting its potential as a transducer surface.
The heterogeneous electron transfer rate constant (Ket) was calculated from the relationship between Rct and Ket using eqn (2) for each modified electrode.69
![]() | (2) |
Fig. 4D presents CV curves of the MXene–CNT nanocomposite recorded at scan rates from 10 to 100 mV s−1 in 5 mM [Fe(CN)6]3−/4− with 0.1 M KCl. The increasing redox peak current with scan rate indicates enhanced electrochemical activity. A linear relationship between the peak current and scan rate (Fig. 4E), with ipa = 0.5642x + 22.667 (R2 = 0.981) and ipc = −5073x − 24.8 (R2 = 0.978), suggests an adsorption-controlled process. Peak shifts confirm surface-controlled electron transfer with minimal diffusion, indicating that the MXene–CNT surface is well-suited for antibody–antigen binding.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 5 DPV signals captured during the optimization of the MXene–CNT concentration (A), anti-TSH quantity (B), anti-TSH binding time (C), and TSH antigen incubation time (D). | ||
Antibody concentration significantly impacts analyte detection. TSH antibody concentrations ranged from 1 to 20 μg mL−1 and were loaded onto EDC–NHS/MXene–CNT/SPGE. The change in signal response (ΔI) was monitored at different TSH antibody concentrations before and after conjugating with 10 μg mL−1 TSH. As shown in Fig. 5B, the signal change (ΔI) slightly increased from 1 to 10 μg mL−1 and then decreased from 10 to 20 μg mL−1 due to limited binding between the TSH antibody and the active site of the interface material. Therefore, we chose 10 μg mL−1 as the optimal TSH antibody concentration for further studies.
An immobilization time is essential for creating a recognition surface to bind the target protein. A very short time results in limited sensing efficiency as the target protein fails to attach effectively. Conversely, extending the antibody immobilization period can improve analytical detection performance. It is vital to identify the optimal time for antibody attachment to validate screening capabilities. The effective recognition time was explored for 10 to 100 minutes, as shown in Fig. 5C. The signal response (ΔI) increased significantly from 10 to 60 minutes, then declined after 60 minutes of TSH antibody immobilization. The findings indicated that 60 minutes is optimal for antibody immobilization on EDC–NHS/MXene–CNT/SPGE to detect the TSH antigen, yielding the maximum current signal change for a quick evaluation.
The incubation time of the TSH antigen is a key variable influencing antibody–antigen binding effectiveness and the outcomes of the electrochemical immunosensors. To determine the optimal incubation time, the BSA/anti-TSH/EDC–NHS/MXene–CNT/SPGE was immersed in the TSH antigen for various intervals. Fig. 5D shows that as the incubation time ranged from 15 to 90 minutes, the change in value (ΔI) increased rapidly, peaking at 45 minutes. However, effective binding does not occur beyond 45 minutes due to hindered diffusion and transport of specific antibody binding sites to the antigen. Thus, 45 minutes was established as optimal for TSH antigen detection to ensure monitoring efficiency of real-world samples.
000 pg mL−1 (R2 = 0.990) and a detection limit of 0.03 pg mL−1. A calibration plot of ΔI against the logarithm of TSH concentration is shown in Fig. 6C. This indicates that the interface material is highly sensitive and can effectively monitor TSH in artificial serum samples. The developed immunosensor outperformed previously studied techniques, as shown in Table 1, and is advantageous for early TSH antigen diagnosis due to its low detection limit. These features enhance the analytical sensing capability, supported by a large effective surface area and robustness of MXene–CNT, which facilitates electron transport due to excellent conductivity. Additionally, the synergistic effect of the MXene–CNT nanocomposite provides abundant active sites for immobilizing antibodies, improving the effectiveness of immunosensor detection.
| Detection techniques | Sensor material | Linear range (pg mL−1) | LOD (pg mL−1) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electrochemical | Nanogold-ionic liquid carbon paste electrode | 200.0–90 000 |
100.0 | 3 |
| Electrochemical | Nanogold-functionalized magnetic beads | 0.168–3360 | 0.84 | 5 |
| ELISA | Microfluidics and thermal lens detection | 16.8–1680 | 5.04 | 77 |
| Chemiluminescence | Biotin–streptavidin | 16.8–6400 | 1.68 | 78 |
| Chemiluminescence | Polymer lab-on-a-chip | 19.2–9240 | 319.2 | 79 |
| ELISA | ||||
| Electrochemical | Non-labelled immunosensor | 117.6–588 | 5.712 | 80 |
| Electrochemical | MXene–CNT/SPGE |
0.10–10 000 |
0.03 | This work |
The developed immunosensor demonstrated ultrasensitive detection of TSH, with DPV measurements spanning a wide dynamic range (0.1–10
000 pg mL−1). Fitting the data to the Langmuir isotherm yielded a dissociation constant (KD ≈ 54 pg mL−1, 1.8–1.9 pM), representing the point at which half of the antibody binding sites are occupied. This low picomolar KD indicates strong antibody–antigen interactions and highlights the sensor's high sensitivity. Concurrently, the antibody surface coverage on the MXene–CNT modified screen-printed graphene electrode was estimated from the applied antibody solution (10 μg mL−1, 5 μL) and the electrode area (0.07 cm2). Assuming full immobilization, the surface coverage was approximately 4.8 pmol cm−2, consistent with the reported values for IgG on electrode surfaces.70–72 The ideal antibody loading and low picomolar KD demonstrate that the MXene–CNT interface supports strong binding interactions and enables reliable assessment of antibody–antigen affinity, significantly enhancing the ultrasensitive performance of the immunosensor, consistent with other advanced nanomaterial-based biosensors.73,74
The developed immunosensor, based on BSA/anti-TSH/EDC–NHS/MXene–CNT/SPGE, was tested for storage stability over 35 days, demonstrating excellent performance. As illustrated in Fig. 6E, the DPV signal was recorded on seven different days, maintaining current values at 99, 98, 89, 88, and 81% of the original at 7, 15, 21, 28, and 35 days, respectively (with %RSD below 5%). This impressive performance is attributed to the strong covalent linkage between the antibody and the nanocomposite surface. Utilizing EDC/NHS surface chemistry for covalent immobilization improved sensor stability by forming amide bonds between carboxyl and amine groups, thereby minimizing desorption. The CVD-grown MXene–CNT architecture provided a stable, 3D conductive interface for reliable TSH detection. The system exhibited advantageous diagnostic characteristics, including a broad dynamic range, low detection limit, and high sensitivity and selectivity for determining a key thyroid function biomarker. This framework is suitable for point-of-care testing due to its straightforward technique, involving a CVD-grown MXene–CNT nanocomposite and an accessible homemade SPGE.
The reproducibility and repeatability were systematically evaluated through multi-electrode, inter-day, and intra-day assessments. Multi-electrode tests with seven independent electrodes for each concentration at 100, 500, and 1000 pg mL−1 yielded low RSDs (1.59–2.73%), with all t-calculated values (0.003) below the t-critical value (2.447), confirming excellent reproducibility (Fig. 6F and Table SI-1). Inter-day evaluation over six consecutive days involved one replicate per day, with the obtained average concentrations between 99.18 and 101.72 pg mL−1, RSD = 1.07%, and a t-calculated value (0.250) below the t-critical value (2.571), indicating consistent and high performance (Table SI-2). Intra-day precision was performed on a single day with five replicates per measurement of 100 pg mL−1 at two distinct times (Table SI-3). The mean recovery concentration ranges from 99.99 to 100.05 pg mL−1, RSDs of 0.160–0.300%, and a t-calculated value of 0.150, which is below t-critical (2.776), confirming high precision. All Student's t-calculated values at 95% confidence level (α = 0.05) were below t-critical, indicating no significant difference between measured and nominal concentrations. These findings demonstrate the immunosensor's high accuracy, reproducibility, and robustness, making it suitable for reliable biosensing, consistent with earlier studies.75,76
| Samples | Spiked (pg mL−1) | Found (pg mL−1) | Recovery (%) | RSD (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0.50 | 0.54 | 108.0 | 1.0 |
| 2 | 1.00 | 0.99 | 99.0 | 2.5 |
| 3 | 3.00 | 2.95 | 98.3 | 5.1 |
Real-time analysis confirmed the sensor's reliability and effectiveness for monitoring TSH levels in artificial serum. TSH concentrations were validated by spiking with known standard amounts and confirming accuracy using a commercial TSH (Catalog number: 4610-TH), with measured values consistent with expected concentrations. Analyzing real samples can pose challenges such as nonspecific binding and matrix interference, but the CVD-grown MXene–CNT nanocomposite improves surface conductivity and mitigates matrix effects by providing a high surface area, abundant electro-active sites, and antifouling properties. Similar effects have been reported for the solution-processed MXene–CNT system.44 This engineered interface enhances antibody immobilization and minimizes signal instability, addressing common limitations in complex biological media. Further optimization, including controlled surface chemistry and mild sample pre-treatment, could enhance clinical performance.
000 pg mL−1, with a detection limit of 0.03 pg mL−1 and greater selectivity by eliminating potential interfering compounds. The TSH immunosensor also demonstrates high selectivity, stability, and reproducibility. Importantly, this immunosensor offers a promising approach for early TSH diagnosis and effectively measures TSH in artificial serum samples. Furthermore, the immunosensors are user-friendly, rapid, and cost-effective, suitable for integration with wearable and flexible electronic sensors for TSH monitoring in artificial and human blood serum.
Supplementary information (SI) is available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d5tb01632k.
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