Optoelectric biosensor using indium-tin-oxide electrodes.

Chang Kyoung Choi, Kenneth D Kihm, Anthony E English
Author Information
  1. Chang Kyoung Choi: Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Biomedical Engineering, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996-2210, USA.

Abstract

The use of an optically thin indium-tin-oxide (ITO) electrode is presented for an optoelectric biosensor simultaneously recording optical images and microimpedance to examine time-dependent cellular growth. The transmittance of a 100 nm thick ITO electrode layer is approximately the same as the transmittance of a clean glass substrate, whereas the industry-standard Au(47.5 nm)/Ti(2.5 nm) electrode layer drops the transmittance to less than 10% of that of the glass substrate. The simultaneous optoelectric measurements permit determining the correlation of the cell-covered area increase with the microimpedance increase, and the example results obtained for live porcine pulmonary artery endothelial cells delineate the quantitative and comprehensive nature of cellular attachment and spreading to the substrate, which has not been clearly perceived before.

MeSH Term

Animals
Biosensing Techniques
Cell Adhesion
Electrochemistry
Electrodes
Equipment Design
Indium
Models, Statistical
Nanoparticles
Optics and Photonics
Silicon
Tin Compounds

Chemicals

Tin Compounds
Indium
indium tin oxide
stannic oxide
Silicon

Word Cloud

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