A non-enzymatic glucose sensor enabled by bioelectronic pH control

Continuous glucose monitoring from sweat and tears can improve the quality of life of diabetic patients and provide data for more accurate diagnosis and treatment. Current continuous glucose sensors use enzymes with a one-to-two week lifespan, which forces periodic replacement. Metal oxide sensors are an alternative to enzymatic sensors with a longer lifetime. However, metal oxide sensors do not operate in sweat and tears because they function at high pH (pH > 10), and sweat and tears are neutral (pH = 7). Here, we introduce a non-enzymatic metal oxide glucose sensor that functions in neutral fluids by electronically inducing a reversible and localized pH change. We demonstrate glucose monitoring at physiologically relevant levels in neutral fluids mimicking sweat, and wireless communication with a personal computer via an integrated circuit board.

Over 30.3 million people in the US have diabetes, a condition that now affects 18% of the worldwide population 1,2 . Typically, a person with diabetes has to monitor their blood sugar level (2-20 mM range) up to five times a day to regulate their metabolism. This monitoring involves the "prick test" to extract the blood, which could be painful, especially for children. Patients that avoid or forget to monitor themselves could suffer health repercussions. In severe cases, these repercussions can be fatal. Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) that uses minimally invasive sources such as sweat is less demanding for patients. It improves healthcare by providing a higher data collection rate with an increased reliability while avoiding the discomfort of the "prick test 3 ". The glucose concentration in sweat ranges from 0.2 mM to 0.6 mM 4 , thus glucose sensing in sweat requires higher sensitivity than in blood. Devices capable of CGM are particularly useful and many sensors exist that can detect glucose from sweat and tears [5][6][7][8][9] . Google and Novartis have developed the smart Google contact lens, in which the sensing, storage, and transmission of the glucose levels occur on the contact lens 10 . In a parallel path, glucose monitoring skin patches are able to measure glucose in sweat 3 . All these examples are enzymatic sensors -the current standard for continuous monitoring of glucose 11 . These sensors detect the presence of glucose by measuring the rate of glucose oxidation from the enzymes glucose oxidase or glucose dehydrogenase 12 . For each glucose molecule oxidized, this reaction transfers an electron through a mediator to the sensing electrode. The sensing electrode records this electron transfer either by reading the electrode current or electrode potential. Enzymatic glucose sensors are highly sensitive, but the lifetime of these sensors is limited by decreasing enzymatic activity with time, this lifespan is typically one to two weeks. This relatively short lifetime increases cost and reduces the scope of enzymatic biosensors 11,13 .
Non-enzymatic glucose sensors based on metal oxides at the interface with nanostructured porous metals or carbon materials have longer lifetime than enzymatic sensors because they do not contain a biological component 14,15 . Metal oxide sensors detect glucose via the direct oxidation reaction of glucose with an activated metal oxide contact; the reaction results in an electron transfer to the contact which is recorded by the sensor as a current 16 . A highly sensitive and stable substrate for glucose detection is cobalt oxide at the interface with nanoporous gold 17 . However, this sensor only works in high pH (pH ≥ 11) because it requires the presence of hydroxide ions 18 . This restriction of working only at high pH is not limited to cobalt oxide sensors but applies to many metal oxide and inorganic material-based sensors that oxidize target molecules 19 . Thus, the development of metal oxide sensors for CGM applications has struggled since bodily fluids such as sweat and tears have a pH range of 4-7 20 . Here, we have developed a cobalt oxide-based glucose sensing platform that is able to detect glucose in solutions with the same pH as the bodily fluids such as sweat and tears. The proposed sensor includes the bioelectronic control of pH in the proximity of the cobalt-oxide sensor surface enabling sensing glucose at high pH even in an otherwise neutral fluid.

Results
The glucose sensor comprises cobalt oxide (Co 3 O 4 ), palladium (Pd), and silver/silver chloride (Ag/AgCl) contacts electrochemically grown on gold (Au) strips defined on a glass substrate. The Co 3 O 4 contact is used to sense glucose, the Pd contact is used to change the local pH of the fluid, and the Ag/AgCl contacts act as reference electrodes that balance the half reactions for glucose and pH modulation respectively (Fig. 1A,B). These contacts are connected to an external circuit board that provides control voltages (V g for the Co 3 O 4 and V pH for Pd), measures the contact currents (I g for Co 3 O 4 and I pH for Pd), and provides signal analysis and wireless communication to a personal computer (Fig. 1A). The geometry of the platform consists of long and narrow interdigitated contacts with a gap of 20 μm. The specific geometry was designed with the aim to increase the I g and I pH currents by increasing the surface area and minimize the time for pH diffusion towards the Co 3 O 4 by reducing the spacing between Pd and Co 3 O 4 contacts. The novelty of this glucose sensing platform is the ability to create localized and transient alkaline conditions (high pH) for glucose sensing to occur on the Co 3 O 4 contact even in neutral fluids (Fig. 1C). This transient high pH is needed because in neutral pH solution, at low voltage (e.g., V g = 0.2-0.5 V), the glucose oxidation reaction does not occur on the Co 3 O 4 contact and thus the presence of glucose cannot be detected. In order to induce local alkaline conditions of a solution starting at pH 7, we set V pH = −1 V between the Pd and the Ag/AgCl. Pd has the ability to absorb H + from the solution by first reducing H + into H at the Pd/ solution interface and then absorbing H into its metal lattice to form PdH x with x being the atomic ratio of H to Pd and its value can reach up to 0.6 21 . In this fashion, our group has already demonstrated transfer of H + to and from hydrated proton conducting polymers 22,23 as well as membrane proteins 24,25 , modulation of solution pH for monitoring enzymatic reactions 26 , controlling bioluminescence 27 , and targeted cargo delivery to cells 28 . By setting the value of V pH , we control the pH of the fluid by multiple units in proximity to the cobalt oxide contact, thus creating a local environment for glucose sensing to occur. When the measurements are completed, the pH is restored to its original value, by switching the V pH off which causes PdH x to release its stored H back into solution as H + (Fig. 1C).
The Au contacts are etched electrochemically by alloying/dealloying in the presence of zinc chloride following the protocol previously reported by Lang et al. 17 , to increase the surface area (Supplemental Figs 4 and 5) and improve the sensitivity towards glucose sensing. Cobalt oxide is then deposited on the gold surface as Co 3 O 4 and, in solution, undergoes a series of oxidation reactions with hydroxide ( Fig. 2A). These reactions increase the oxidation state from Co(II/III) to Co(III) and Co(IV), respectively 18 : www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ While both Co 3 O 4 and CoOOH species can oxidize glucose, the primary mechanism for oxidation of glucose to gluconolactone in cobalt oxide sensors involves two Co(IV) atoms in the reaction 18,29 : 2 6 12 6 6 10 6 In (3), two Co(IV) atoms are reduced to Co(III) as CoOOH. These CoOOH species are in turn oxidized back to CoO 2 , for each Co(III) oxidized to Co(IV), two electrons are collected by the cobalt oxide contact and are recorded as current (I g ) (2). At neutral pH, the concentration of hydroxide species necessary to create Co(IV) is www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ low thus greatly limiting the glucose oxidation reaction kinetics. At high pH ( Fig. 2A), the cobalt surface contains many more Co(IV) and the glucose oxidation reaction is faster allowing glucose detection at lower concentrations respect to neutral pH. For this reason, metal oxide sensors and other inorganic sensors that directly oxidize glucose operate at high pH 19 .
To see the behavior of the sensing element in our platform, we performed cyclic voltammetry measurements (CV) using a Co 3 O 4 contact in NaCl solutions containing 10 mM glucose at pH 7 (Fig. 2B, black trace) and NaCl with 0.001 M NaOH at pH 11 (Fig. 2B, red trace). From the CV it is clear that the glucose oxidation reaction at pH 7 is barely detectable, while at pH 11 in 0.001 M NaOH the peak current associated with oxidation Co(III) to Co(IV) after the contact is reduced by the reaction with glucose occurs around V = 0.5 V (Supplemental Fig. 11). Similarly, we performed CV of glucose in pH 12 and pH 13. When the pH increases, both oxidation peak current magnitude increases as well as its peak position shifts to lower potential (Supplemental Fig. 10). In order to reproduce the alkaline conditions found when the glucose sensor is immersed in NaOH, we perform pH control in proximity to the cobalt oxide contact using the Pd contact with V pH = −1 V for different amounts of time (t) in NaCl at pH 7 (Fig. 2C). For t < 300 s the pH increases with time because H + are able to transfer from the solution to the Pd contact. However, at t = 300 s the solution pH saturates because there is a low concentration of H + while an OH − constant concentration is reached at the interface with the Pd. Even with lower V pH = −3 V, the solution pH saturates at pH 11-12 (Supplemental Fig. 1). This transient pH change is reversible when the V pH is returned to 0 V (Supplemental Fig. 2 and Video). We are limited in the magnitude of V pH by electrolysis of water. We thus choose a V pH ~ −1 V for our glucose sensing. This V pH value corresponds to a solution of pH 11. For glucose detection, we measure the current at the cobalt oxide sensing contact (I g ) with V g = 0.5 V (Fig. 2D). However, the increased current from glucose oxidation can begin to occur in lower voltage V g ~ 0.2 V (Supplemental Fig. 10). A low V g ~ 0.2 V can be useful in order to improve the selectivity towards interferent species such as lactic acid and uric acid that exist in sweat. During the measurement we cycle the solution pH from neutral (V pH = 0.3 V) to pH 11 (V pH = −1 V). At neutral pH, I g is very small for glucose concentrations below 1 mM. However, at pH 11, I g raises above the noise level and further increases with addition of glucose in concentrations from 0.2 mM to 50 mM during periods of pH 11 (V pH = −1 V). The resulting I g is plotted against glucose concentration for 0.1-3 mM both at pH 7 and pH 11 (Fig. 2E). These data clearly show that the glucose oxidation is more efficient at pH 11 and is required for better sensitivity of our biosensor. Additionally, a Langmuir isotherm fit corresponding to the adsorption of glucose at the surface of the Co 3 O 4 is in agreement with the experimental data at the concentration range between 100 μM-3 mM. allowing for detection of glucose in sweat concentrations while electronically inducing basic conditions in electrolytes of physiological pH. Co 3 O 4 sensors have shown limit of detection in the nanomolar range in high alkaline conditions 18 , however, in this work we did not perform measurements for finding the detection limit. At pH 11, the reaction rate, is higher because there are more Co (IV) species available to oxidize the glucose. It is worth mentioning that when V pH goes from V pH = −1 V to V pH ≥ 0 the pH in the vicinity of the Co 3 O 4 is higher than pH 7 due to slow H + diffusion. This may result in the increased signal in the black curve of Fig. 2E (pH 7).
To demonstrate the feasibility of the non-enzymatic cobalt oxide glucose sensor in real world continuous glucose monitoring measurements, we developed a prototype low-cost and low-power miniature board that can apply voltages (V g , V pH ), record and condition the signal as well as transmit it to an external device (WI-FI) for storage and post processing (Fig. 3A). The board includes a WI-FI enabled microcontroller, a multiplexer, an amplifier, and analogue to digital converter, and two batteries. We connect the board to the Co 3 O 4 , Pd, and Ag/AgCl contacts to the inputs and outputs of the board (Fig. 3B). A high-level schematic is presented in Fig. 3C and a more detailed one is presented in the Supplemental Fig. 3. The board features two electronic circuits, which are isolated from each other and each of them has an adjustable power circuit. The first circuit supplies V g (from 10 mV to 3.2 V) to the Co 3 O 4 contact for glucose sensing to occur, and the second circuit supplies V pH (from −1.1 V to 0.3 V) to the Pd in order to create the alkaline conditions. We used a WI-FI enabled microcontroller (ESP8266,) and a 16-bit analog-to-digital converter to measure I g . Figure 3D shows the experimental I g current acquired from the glucose sensing platform and the circuit board by increasing concentrations of glucose in a NaCl solution made to reproduce human sweat. This I g data is filtered by the conditioning board to remove noise and recorded with a customized software in a personal laptop wirelessly connected to the microcontroller. Figure 3D shows the measured current as a function of time in seconds (gray) as well as the filtered signal using a moving average filtering technique with a 1/3 of a second window (black). The data is consistent with what we acquired with the bulkier and non-portable potentiostat and semiconductor parameter analyzer and follows the analogous calibration curve presented in Fig. 2E.

Conclusions
We have developed a non-enzymatic metal oxide glucose sensor that is able to detect physiologically relevant glucose levels in neutral bodily fluids such as sweat and tears. This sensor is superior to other metal oxide glucose sensors because it does not require an alkaline fluid for operation. To sense glucose in neutral fluids, this sensor induces a localized and reversible pH change with a Pd contact that absorbs H + from the neutral fluid and increases the pH. This flexibility allows for the seamless integration with current glucose sensing platforms such as contact lenses 10 , and skin patches 3 . With respect to the current enzymatic sensors, this metal oxide sensor does not suffer from limited lifetime due to enzyme degradation over time. This strategy of controlling local pH to enable sensing in neutral biological fluid is broadly applicable to other metal oxide and oxidative inorganic sensors for biologically relevant analytes including but not limited to ascorbic acid, dopamine, glycerol, ethylene glycol, and nitrite 30  www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/

Materials and Methods
Glucose sensor fabrication. Glass slides were sonicated for 20 min in 80% v/v acetone and 20% v/v iso-propanol (IPA), and dried with N2. S1813 (Dow chemicals) photoresist was deposited on top of the glass substrates, following standard protocols (Spin-coated at 3000 RPM, baked 1 min. at 110 °C), to create the Au patterns. A 5 nm Titanium adhesion layer and a 120 nm Au layer were evaporated on glass microscope slides. Deposition of photoresist was repeated prior to each electrodeposition following the same process. To increase the sensitivity of the sensor, we increased surface area of Au strip a process adapted from Lang et al. (Supplemental Fig. 4) 17 . Nanoporous Au was produced by electrochemically etching the 100 nm thick Au layer with a solution of 1.5 M ZnCl 2 in Benzyl Alcohol at 120 °C. To cycles of a cyclic voltammetry routine from −0.4 V to 1.7 V vs AgCl was performed with Zn wire reference and counter electrodes and a Metrohn Autolab Potentiostat (PGSTAT128N). This routine corresponds to two rounds of Zn-Au alloying/dealloying. The devices were then washed with 0.1 M H 2 SO 4 , IPA, and di-water. This treatment was only performed on the contact destined for cobalt oxide. The nanoporous Au has higher capacitance resulting from a larger surface area (Supplemental Fig. 5). Cobalt Oxide was deposited from a solution of 5 mM Cobalt(II) Nitrate suspended in 0.1 M H 2 SO 4 . A CV routine (−1.2 V to −0.2 V) with a glass AgCl reference electrode and a Pt wire counter electrode. This was performed with a Metrohn Autolab Potentiostat (PGSTAT128N). To deposit Pd, we used 10 wt.% Palladium Nitrate (PdNO 3 ), purchased from sigma, and diluted with di-water to give a 1 wt.% PdNO 3 solution. PdNPs were electrochemically deposited onto the Pd contacts using a DC voltage of V = −0.3 V with a deposition time of 3 seconds with a glass AgCl reference and Pt counter electrode (Supplemental Fig. 6). This resulted in a darkening of the contacts where the NPs were successfully deposited. The Pd nanoparticles have an increased surface area which greatly enhances the pH change effect over planar Pd and area stable over many pH cycles ( Supplemental Figs 7 and 8).
To create the Ag/AgCl electrode, we electrodeposited Ag on top of the Au contact in the reference electrodes by using a constant current of 0.5 mA for 15 s (outer contact) and 0.15 mA for 150 s (inner contact), from a solution containing 50 mM of AgNO 3 and 0.2 M sulfuric acid in di-water. A glass Ag/AgCl (V ~ 0.2 vs SHE) electrode was used as a reference electrode and Pt wire was used as a counter electrode. CV was used to form AgCl on the Ag, by using a solution containing 0.5 M NaCl in di-water. 5 cycles were carried from −0.5 to 0.9 V with a scan rate of 50 mV/s (Supplemental Fig. 6). An SU8 photoresist layer was patterned to insulate the Au interconnect and define the area of the electrodes.