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Article Dans Une Revue Analytica Chimica Acta Année : 2012

Photopolymerization and photostructuring of molecularly imprinted polymers for sensor applications-A review

Résumé

Biosensors are already well established in modern analytical chemistry, and have become important tools for clinical diagnostics, environmental analysis, production monitoring, drug detection or screening. They are based on the specific molecular recognition of a target molecule by a biological receptor such as an antibody or an enzyme. Synthetic biomimetic receptors like molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) have been shown to be a potential alternative to biomolecules as recognition element for biosensing. Produced by a templating process at the molecular level, MIPs are capable of recognizing and binding target molecules with similar specificity and selectivity to their natural analogues. One of the main challenges in MIP sensor development is the miniaturization of MIP structures and their interfacing with the transducer or with a microchip. Photostructuring appears thereby as one of the most suitable methods for patterning MIPs at the micro and nano scale, directly on the transducer surface. In the present review, a general overview on MIPs in biosensing applications is given, and the photopolymerization and photopatterning of MIPs are particularly described.

Dates et versions

hal-00782724 , version 1 (30-01-2013)

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Yannick Fuchs, Olivier Soppera, Karsten Haupt. Photopolymerization and photostructuring of molecularly imprinted polymers for sensor applications-A review. Analytica Chimica Acta, 2012, 717, pp.7-20. ⟨10.1016/j.aca.2011.12.026⟩. ⟨hal-00782724⟩
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