# Towards a Rational Design of Biosensors: Engineering Covalently Grafted Interfacial Adlayers as a Testbed Platform for Electrochemical Detection of Epinephrine

**Authors:** Xiaoli Chang, Yuan Fang, Oleksandr Ivasenko

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/molecules30102236 · Molecules · 2025-05-21

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a method to design electrochemical sensors by engineering surface layers for better detection of epinephrine.

## Contribution

A testbed platform using molecular-level surface engineering on carbon substrates for rational biosensor design is proposed.

## Key findings

- ATA-HOPG surfaces significantly enhance electrochemical detection of epinephrine at sub-micromolar levels.
- PAB forms disordered layers that hinder sensor performance, while ATA forms ordered monolayers that improve responsiveness.
- Electrostatic interactions between COO− groups and protonated epinephrine improve detection efficiency.

## Abstract

The performance of electrochemical (bio)sensors is fundamentally determined by the precise engineering of interfacial layers that govern (bio)analyte–surface interactions. However, elucidating structure–function relationships remains challenging due to the complex architecture of modern sensors and the irregular nanoscale morphology of many high-performance materials. In this study, we present a strategy for designing custom functional interfaces as well-defined platforms for probing interfacial processes. Focusing on epinephrine (EP) detection as an important representative of catecholamines, we compare the interfacial behavior of two carboxy-functionalized electrodes—grafted with either para-aminobenzoic acid (PAB) or 3,4,5-tricarboxybenzenediazonium (ATA)—against atomically flat highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) as a control. While both modifiers introduce carboxyl groups, PAB forms disordered multilayers that inhibit surface responsiveness, whereas ATA yields an ultrathin monolayer with accessible COOH groups. Electrochemical analysis reveals that ATA-HOPG significantly enhances EP detection at sub-micromolar levels, facilitated by electrostatic interactions between surface-bound COO− and protonated EP and its redox products. These results demonstrate that nanoscale control of diazonium grafting is crucial for optimizing bioanalyte recognition. More broadly, this work highlights how molecular-level surface engineering on high-quality carbon substrates can serve as a test-bed platform for the rational design of advanced electrochemical sensing interfaces.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** epinephrine (PubChem CID 838), para-aminobenzoic acid (PubChem CID 978), COO− (PubChem CID 14786)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** ATA (MESH:D000640), catecholamines (MESH:D002395), COO (MESH:C041069), carbon (MESH:D002244), 3,4,5-tricarboxybenzenediazonium (-), EP (MESH:D004837), PAB (MESH:D010129)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

74 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12114450/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12114450