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Carboxyl-fentanyl detection using optical fibre grating-based sensors functionalised with molecularly imprinted nanoparticles

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-04-14, 09:57 authored by LiangLiang Liu, Fabiana Grillo, Francesco Canfarotta, Michael Whitcombe, Stephen P Morgan, Sergey Piletsky, Ricardo Correia, ChenYang He, Andrew Norris, Serhiy Korposh
Butyrylfentanyl is a new designer drug reported with growing use and related deaths. Routine toxicological analyses of this novel synthetic opioid drug have not been established yet. This work reports a fibre optic sensor that measures carboxyl-fentanyl which is the major metabolite of butyrylfentanyl presented in blood, providing a promising tool for detecting butyrylfentanyl intoxication. A long period fibre grating (LPG) sensor array operating at phase-matching condition is deployed in combination with a state-of-the-art molecular imprinting technique. Nano-sized molecularly imprinted polymers (nanoMIPs) are synthesised via a solid-phase approach and coated on the surface of an LPG array. An LPG array consists of two parts: a detection and a reference LPG. The former is functionalised with nanoMIPs prior to the measurements, whilst the latter is used to take into account the temperature response of the detection LPG. The developed sensor exhibits a gradual response over increasing concentrations of carboxyl-fentanyl from 0 to 1000 ng/mL with a minimal detected concentration of 50 ng/mL, that corresponds to a wavelength shift of 1.20 ± 0.2 nm. The Langmuir adsorption isotherm is applied to fit the analytical data which reveal a binding constant of 2.03 μM-1. The developed sensor shows high selectivity in detecting carboxyl-fentanyl among other drugs and potential interferents including morphine, cocaine, glucose and albumin. It shows a certain degree of cross-response to fentanyl which shares the same binding sites as carboxyl-fentanyl and therefore can be potentially used to detect fentanyl.

History

Citation

Biosensors and Bioelectronics 177 (2021) 113002

Author affiliation

Department of Chemistry

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Biosensors and Bioelectronics

Volume

177

Issue

.

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0956-5663

eissn

1873-4235

Acceptance date

2021-01-12

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2021-04-14

Spatial coverage

England

Language

English