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A Quantitative Bacteria Monitoring and Killing Platform Based on Electron Transfer from Bacteria to a Semiconductor

Guomin Wang*, Kaiwei Tang, Zheyi Meng, Pei Liu, Shi Mo, Babak Mehrjou, Huaiyu Wang, Xuanyong Liu*, Zhengwei Wu*, Paul K. Chu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

A platform with both bacteria killing and sensing capabilities is crucial for monitoring the entire bacteria-related process on biomaterials and biomedical devices. Electron transfer (ET) between the bacteria and a Au-loaded semiconductor (ZnO) is observed to be the primary factor for effective bacteria sensing and fast bacteria killing. The electrons produce a saturation current that varies linearly with the bacteria number, semi-logarithmically, with R2 of 0.98825, thus providing an excellent tool to count bacteria quantitatively in real-time. Furthermore, ET leads to continuous electron loss killing of about 80% of Escherichia coli in only 1 h without light. The modularity and extendability of this ET-based platform are also demonstrated by the excellent results obtained from other semiconductor/substrate systems and the stability is confirmed by recycling tests. The underlying mechanism for the dual functions is not due to conventional attributed Zn2+ leaching or photocatalysis but instead electrical interactions upon direct contact. The results reveal the capability of real-time detection of bacteria based on ET while providing information about the antibacterial behavior of ZnO-based materials especially in the early stage. The concept can be readily incorporated into the design of smart and miniaturized devices that can sense and kill bacteria simultaneously.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2003616
Number of pages9
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume32
Issue number39
Online published19 Aug 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2020

Research Keywords

  • antibacterial activity
  • Au nanoparticles
  • bacteria sensing
  • electron transfer
  • zinc oxide nanorods

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