Amyloid Fibril‐Templated High‐Performance Conductive Aerogels with Sensing Properties
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Date
2020-11-12Type
- Journal Article
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Cited 16 times in
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Cited 17 times in
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Abstract
Amyloid fibrils have garnered increasing attention as viable building blocks for functional material design and synthesis, especially those derived from food and agricultural wastes. Here, amyloid fibrils generated from β‐lactoglobulin, a by‐product from cheese industries, have been successfully used as a template for the design of a new class of high‐performance conductive aerogels with sensing properties. These mechanically stable aerogels with three‐dimensional porous architecture have a large surface area (≈159 m2 g−1), low density (≈0.044 g cm−3), and high electrical conductivity (≈0.042 S cm−1). A pressure sensing device is developed from these aerogels based on their combined electrical conductivity and compressible properties. More interestingly, these aerogels can be employed to design novel enzyme sensors by exploiting the proteinaceous nature of amyloid fibrils. This study expands the scope of structured amyloid fibrils as scaffolds for in situ polymerization of conducting polymers, offering new opportunities to design materials with multiple functionalities. © 2020 Wiley Show more
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publishedExternal links
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SmallVolume
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Publisher
WileySubject
aerogels; amyloid fibrils; conducting polymers; sensorsOrganisational unit
03857 - Mezzenga, Raffaele / Mezzenga, Raffaele
02891 - ScopeM / ScopeM
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Show all metadata
Citations
Cited 16 times in
Web of Science
Cited 17 times in
Scopus
ETH Bibliography
yes
Altmetrics