Nanotechnology for biosensors: A Review
Aishwaryadev Banerjee, Swagata Maity, Carlos H. Mastrangelo

TL;DR
This review discusses the integration of nanotechnology into biosensors, highlighting advancements, applications, and challenges such as toxicity, miniaturization issues, and integration difficulties, to inform future development.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of nanotechnology-enabled biosensors, detailing their working principles, applications, and the challenges faced in their development and deployment.
Findings
Nanotechnology enhances biosensor sensitivity and performance.
Nanostructured biosensors enable rapid, in vivo detection.
Challenges include toxicity, miniaturization unreliability, and integration issues.
Abstract
Biosensors are essential tools which have been traditionally used to monitor environmental pollution, detect the presence of toxic elements and biohazardous bacteria or virus in organic matter and biomolecules for clinical diagnostics. In the last couple of decades, the scientific community has witnessed their widespread application in the fields of military, health care, industrial process control, environmental monitoring, food-quality control, and microbiology. Biosensor technology has greatly evolved from the in vitro studies based on the biosensing ability of organic beings to the highly sophisticated world of nanofabrication enabled miniaturized biosensors. The incorporation of nanotechnology in the vast field of biosensing has led to the development of novel sensors and sensing mechanisms, as well as an increase in the sensitivity and performance of the existing biosensors.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques · Biosensors and Analytical Detection · Electrochemical sensors and biosensors
