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Dive into the research topics where Abdul Rehman is active.

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Featured researches published by Abdul Rehman.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2012

Ionic Liquids as Green Solvents and Electrolytes for Robust Chemical Sensor Development

Abdul Rehman; Xiangqun Zeng

Ionic liquids (ILs) exhibit complex behavior. Their simultaneous dual nature as solvents and electrolytes supports the existence of structurally tunable cations and anions, which could provide the basis of a novel sensing technology. However, the elucidation of the physiochemical properties of ILs and their connections with the interaction and redox mechanisms of the target analytes requires concerted data acquired from techniques including spectroscopic investigations, thermodynamic and solvation models, and molecular simulations. Our laboratory is using these techniques for the rational design and selection of ILs and their composites that could serve as the recognition elements in various sensing platforms. ILs show equal utility in both piezoelectric and electrochemical formats through functionalized ionics that provide orthogonal chemo- and regioselectivity. In this Account, we summarize recent developments in and applications of task-specific ILs and their surface immobilization on solid supports. Such materials can serve as a replacement for conventional recognition elements and electrolytic media in piezoelectric and electrochemical sensing approaches, and we place a special focus on our contributions to these fields. ILs take advantage of both the physical and chemical forces of interaction and can incorporate various gas analytes. Exploiting these features, we have designed piezoelectric sensors and sensor arrays for high-temperature applications. Vibrational spectroscopy of these ILs reveals that hydrogen bonding and dipole-dipole interactions are typically responsible for the observed sensing profiles, but the polarization and cavity formation effect as an analyte approaches the recognition matrix can also cause selective discrimination. IL piezoelectric sensors can have low sensitivity and reproducibility. To address these issues, we designed IL/conducting polymer host systems that tune existing molecular templates with highly selective structure specific interactions. We can also modulate the IL microenvironment so that ILs act as filler molecules to optimize host template cavity size, shape, and functionality. When used as non-volatile and tunable electrolytes, ILs show great potential for the development of both amperometric and electrochemical double layer capacitance sensors for the detection of oxygen and explosives. We also designed and tested a two dimensional electrode chip that enabled simultaneous monitoring of both piezoelectric and electrochemical signals. This device imparted additional selectivity and overcame the limitations of the typical sensing protocol. The integrated piezoelectric and electrochemical sensing approach allows the measure of the charge to mass ratio under a dynamic regime. The electrogravimetric dynamic relationship allows for further discrimination between and accurate quantification of the interfacial transfer of different species. In summary, although new systematic and mechanistic studies of ILs are needed, we show that the self-organized phases of the aggregated non-polar and charged domains of ILs are useful sensing materials for electrochemical and quartz crystal microbalance transducers.


Sensors | 2010

QCM-arrays for sensing terpenes in fresh and dried herbs via bio-mimetic MIP layers.

Naseer Iqbal; Ghulam Mustafa; Abdul Rehman; Alexander Biedermann; Bita Najafi; Peter A. Lieberzeit; Franz L. Dickert

A piezoelectric 10 MHz multichannel quartz crystal microbalance (MQCM), coated with six molecularly imprinted polystyrene artificial recognition membranes have been developed for selective quantification of terpenes emanated from fresh and dried Lamiaceae family species, i.e., rosemary (Rosmarinus Officinalis L.), basil (Ocimum Basilicum) and sage (Salvia Officinalis). Optimal e-nose parameters, such as layer heights (1–6 KHz), sensitivity <20 ppm of analytes, selectivity at 50 ppm of terpenes, repeatability and reproducibility were thoroughly adjusted prior to online monitoring. Linearity in reversible responses over a wide concentration range <20–250 ppm has been achieved. Discrimination between molecules of similar molar masses, even for isomers, e.g. α-pinene and β-pinene is possible. The array has proven its sensitive and selective properties of sensor responses (20–1,200 Hz) for the difference of fresh and dried herbs. The sensor data attained was validated by GC-MS, to analyze the profiles of sensor emanation patterns. The shelf-life of herbs was monitored via emanation of organic volatiles during a few days. Such an array in association with data analysis tools can be utilized for characterizing complex mixtures.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Glycosylation of Quinone-Fused Polythiophene for Reagentless and Label-Free Detection of E. coli

Fen Ma; Abdul Rehman; Haiying Liu; Jingtuo Zhang; Shilei Zhu; Xiangqun Zeng

In this report, a new polythiophene interface is fabricated containing fused quinone moieties which are then glycosylated to form a carbohydrate platform for bacterial detection. Very importantly, this interface can be used for label-free and reagentless detection, both by electrochemical and Quartz Crystal Microbalance (QCM) transducers and by using the direct pili-mannose binding as well as Concanavalin A (Con A) mediated lipopolysaccharides (LPS)-mannose binding. The conductive polymers unique collective properties are very sensitive to very minor perturbations, which result in significant changes of electrical conductivity and providing amplified sensitivity and improved limits of detection (i.e., 25 cell/mL for electrochemical sensor and 50 cells/mL for QCM sensor), a widened logarithmic range of detection (i.e., 3-7 for pili-mannose binding and 2-8 for Con A mediated binding), high specificity and selectivity, and an extraordinary reliability by a mechanism of internal validation. With these analytical performances, the described biosensor is envisaged for being capable of differentiating Gram-negative bacterial strain and species, for many important applications.


Analytical Chemistry | 2011

Differential solute gas response in ionic-liquid-based QCM arrays: Elucidating design factors responsible for discriminative explosive gas sensing

Abdul Rehman; Andrew D. Hamilton; Alfred Chung; Gary A. Baker; Zhe Wang; Xiangqun Zeng

An eight-sensor array coupling a chemoselective room-temperature ionic liquid (RTIL) with quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) transduction is presented in this work in order to demonstrate the power of this approach in differentiating closely related analytes in sensory devices. The underlying mechanism behind the specific sensory response was explored by (i) studying mass loading and viscoelasticity effects of the sensing layers, predominantly through variation in damping impedance, the combination of which determines the sensitivity; (ii) creation of a solvation model based on Abrahams solvation descriptors which reveals the fact that polarizability and lipophilicity are the main factors influencing the dissolution of gas analytes into the RTILs; and (iii) determination of enthalpy and entropy values for the studied interactions and comparison via a simulation model, which is also effective for pattern discrimination, in order to establish a foundation for the analytical scientist as well as inspiration for synthetic pathways and innovative research into next-generation sensory approaches. The reported sensors displayed an excellent sensitivity with detection limit of <0.2%, fast response and recovery, and a workable temperature range of 27-55 °C and even higher. Linear discriminant analysis (LDA) showed a discrimination accuracy of 86-92% for nitromethane and 1-ethyl-2-nitrobenzene, 71% for different mixtures of nitromethane, and 100% for these analytes when thermodynamic parameters were used as input data. We envisage applications to detecting other nitroaromatics and security-related gas targets, and high-temperature or real-time situations where manual access is restricted, opening up new horizons in chemical sensing.


Analytical Chemistry | 2012

Dynamics of redox processes in ionic liquids and their interplay for discriminative electrochemical sensing.

Chunhui Xiao; Abdul Rehman; Xiangqun Zeng

Motivated by the use of ionic liquids (ILs) as green replacers of traditional electrolytes, a mechanistic study has been systematically conducted to comprehend various design principles responsible for electrochemical profiling of redox-active species in ILs. The full spectrum of properties associated with ILs is exploited to assess the viability of this platform, thus revealing the correlation between the redox properties and the physiochemical parameters of the species involved. This includes the evaluation of (1) the variation of redox responses toward analytes with similar molecular structures or functionalities of ILs, (2) the influence in terms of physical criteria of the system such as viscosity and conductivity as well as chemical structure of ILs, and (3) the sustainability in harsh conditions (high temperature or humidity) and interferences. The principle is exemplified via trinitrotoluene (TNT) and dinitrotoluene (DNT) with inherent redox activity as analytes and IL membranes as solvents and electrolytes using glassy carbon (GC) electrodes. A discrete response pattern is generated that is analyzed through linear discriminant analysis (LDA) leading to 100% classification accuracy even for the mixture of analytes. Quantitative analysis through square wave voltammetry (SWV) gave rise to the detection limits in liquid phase of 190 and 230 nM for TNT and DNT, respectively, with a linear range up to 100 μM. Gas-phase analysis shows strong redox signals for the estimated concentrations of 0.27 and 2.05 ppm in the gas phase for TNT and DNT, respectively, highlighting that ILs adopt a role as a preconcentrator to add on sensitivity with enhanced selectivity coming from their physiochemical diversity, thus addressing the major concerns usually referred to most sensor systems.


Langmuir | 2011

Study of Ionic Liquid Immobilization on Polyvinyl Ferrocene Substrates for Gas Sensor Arrays

Kuang-Yu Hou; Abdul Rehman; Xiangqun Zeng

In this report, the effects of conductive polymer oxidation states and structures on the design and development of ionic liquid (IL)/conductive polymer (CP) composite films for gas sensing are systematically characterized. Four different polyvinyl ferrocene (PVF) films synthesized by varying the conditioning potential (0.7 vs 0.0 V) and the electrolyte are tested for their gas-sensing properties (e.g., sensitivity, selectivity, response time, linearity, and dynamic range against various gas analytes such as dichloromethane, ethanol, natural gas, methane, formaldehyde (37%), and benzene) utilizing the quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) and ATR-FT-IR. The best available film is further studied as a substrate for the immobilization of various ILs that enhanced both the sensitivity and selectivity. Finally, two arrays, each comprising four sensors with the following scheme are developed and characterized for their ability to classify the four target analytes by using linear discriminant analysis: (1) the highest sensitivity PVF film immobilized with four different ILs and (2) the highest sensitivity IL immobilized in four different PVF films. Array 2 is proven to be much better than array 1 in discriminating the analytes, which is very significant in establishing the fact that a diverse set of PVF redox states allow the rational development of a PVF/IL composite-based sensor array in order to analyze complex mixtures utilizing structural differences and the extent of intermolecular interactions.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Antimicrobial susceptibility assays based on the quantification of bacterial lipopolysaccharides via a label free lectin biosensor.

Fen Ma; Abdul Rehman; Matthew Sims; Xiangqun Zeng

A label free lectin biosensor developed in our laboratory that can quantitatively measure the binding between the lectin immobilized at the carbohydrate sensor surface and the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on Gram-negative bacteria was demonstrated for an antibiotic susceptibility assay. The biosensor utilizes a polythiophene interface containing fused quinone moieties glycosylated to form a carbohydrate platform for the immobilization of Concanavalin A (Con A) and is capable of LPS binding measurements via orthogonal quartz crystal microbalance and electrochemical readouts (EQCM). Such orthogonal transduction provides cross-validation, better sensor sensitivity, and a large dynamic range of the measurements. We have applied this label free lectin biosensor for a new antibiotic susceptibility assay by characterizing the antimicrobial activities of various antibiotics (i.e., ciprofloxacin, ceftriaxone, and tetracycline) against Escherichia coli W1485 as a model system. The label free biosensor allows both end point and real time measurements of antibiotic effects on the bacterial cell surface LPS, which is shown to correlate to their antibiotic effects. At the end point, after 18 h incubation of bacterial cells with these three antibiotics respectively, the bacterial LPS binding signal was reduced to 23%, 27%, and 38%, respectively, for the three antibiotics, indicating that ciprofloxacin is the most effective against this E. coli strain. Real time measurements at the 1 h time point showed a similar trend with a reduction of binding to 91%, 93%, and 95%, respectively. From the binding kinetics of these measurements, the relaxation time (τ) was obtained, where higher τ value means slow binding interactions between the lectin and the bacterial LPS. The obtained order of τ, (i.e., τciprofloxacin > τceftriaxone > τtetracycline) again indicated that ciprofloxacin has more bactericidal activity than the other two antibiotics with the same concentrations. Thus, we are able to establish that the reduction in the binding of LPS with the lectin Con A sensor upon exposure to various antibiotics has a direct relation with the antibiotic dosages making this label free biosensor assay promising for therapeutic management of these drugs as well as for applications in antibiotic research and development.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2016

Glycosylated Conductive Polymer: A Multimodal Biointerface for Studying Carbohydrate–Protein Interactions

Xiangqun Zeng; Ke Qu; Abdul Rehman

Carbohydrate-protein interactions occur through glycoproteins, glycolipids, or polysaccharides displayed on the cell surface with lectins. However, studying these interactions is challenging because of the complexity and heterogeneity of the cell surface, the inherent structural complexity of carbohydrates, and the typically weak affinities of the binding reactions between the lectins and monovalent carbohydrates. The lack of chromophores and fluorophores in carbohydrate structures often drives such investigations toward fluorescence labeling techniques, which usually require tedious and complex synthetic work to conjugate fluorescent tags with additional risk of altering the reaction dynamics. Probing these interactions directly on the cell surface is even more difficult since cells could be too fragile for labeling or labile dynamics could be affected by the labeled molecules that may interfere with the cellular activities, resulting in unwanted cell responses. In contrast, label-free biosensors allow real-time monitoring of carbohydrate-protein interactions in their natural states. A prerequisite, though, for this strategy to work is to mimic the coding information on potential interactions of cell surfaces onto different biosensing platforms, while the complementary binding process can be transduced into a useful signal noninvasively. Through carbohydrate self-assembled monolayers and glycopolymer scaffolds, the multivalency of the naturally existing simple and complex carbohydrates can be mimicked and exploited with label-free readouts (e.g., optical, acoustic, mechanical, electrochemical, and electrical sensors), yet such inquiries reflect only limited aspects of complicated biointeraction processes due to the unimodal transduction. In this Account, we illustrate that functionalized glycosylated conductive polymer scaffolds are the ideal multimodal biointerfaces that not only simplify the immobilization process for surface fabrication via electrochemical polymerization but also enable the simultaneous analysis of the binding events with orthogonal electrical, optical, or mass sensing label-free readouts. We established this approach using polyaniline and polythiophene as examples. Two general methods were demonstrated for glycosylated polymer fabrications (i.e., electropolymerization of monomer bearing α-mannoside residues or click chemistry based mannose conjugation to electrochemically preformed quinone fused polymer with potential to introduce different carbohydrate moieties and construct glycan arrays in a similar manner). Their conjugated π system extending over a large number of recurrent monomer units renders them sensitive optoelectronic materials. The carbohydrate-protein interactions on the side chain could disrupt the electrostatic, H-bonding, steric, or van der Waals interactions within or between polymers, leading to a change of conductivity or optical absorption of the conductive polymers. This will allow concurrent interrogation of these interactions with adjoining biological processes and mechanisms in multimodal fashion. Furthermore, the functionalized glycosylated conductive polymers can be designed and synthesized with controlled oxidation states, desired ionic dopants, and the imperative density and orientation of the sugar ligands that enable the assessment of differential receptor binding profiles of carbohydrate-protein interactions with much more detailed information and high accuracy. Finally, the glycosylated biosensing interfaces were successfully validated for their applications in Gram-negative bacterial detection, antibiotic resistance studies, and antimicrobial susceptibility assays, all based on inferring carbohydrate-protein interactions directly on cell surfaces, thus illustrating their potential uses in infectious disease research, clinical diagnostics, and environmental monitoring of harmful pathogens.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2014

Real-Time Monitoring of Cell Mechanical Changes Induced by Endothelial Cell Activation and their Subsequent Binding with Leukemic Cell Lines

Liang Tan; Peiling Lin; Bahareh Pezeshkian; Abdul Rehman; Gerard Madlambayan; Xiangqun Zeng

Endothelial cell (EC) activation and their subsequent binding with different cells have various mechanical consequences that, if monitored real time, can serve as a functional biomarker of many pathophysiological response mechanisms. This work presents an innovative and facile strategy to conduct such monitoring using quartz crystal microbalance (QCM), thereby relating the shifts in its frequency and motional resistance to morphological changes upon cell-cell and cell-substrate interactions. By activating ECs with TNF-α and then characterizing their binding with HL-60 and KG-1 leukemia cells, we are able to induce the mechanical changes in ECs especially in the region of cell-substrate contact which resulted in dynamically coupled mass and viscoelastic changes representing the extent of both activation and binding. The activated ECs suffered a decrease of cellular contact area, leading to positive frequency shift and decreased motional resistance. The binding of leukemia cells onto pre-activated ECs exerted a mechanical force to regain the cell surface contact which resulted in the obvious QCM responses opposite to that of activation, and proportional to the number of cells added, in spite of the fact that these added cells are extremely outside the extinction boundary of the shear wave generated by QCM. Different cell lines demonstrate different attachment behavior, which was detected by the QCM. Despite these variations are quite subtle, yet the sensitivity of the technique for dynamic changes at the interface makes them detectable. Moreover, the reproducibility of the generated data determined at each step by deviation measurements (<10%) in response plot was very high despite the high possible heterogeneity in cell populations. The results are explained on the basis of simple theoretical and physical models, although, the development of a more quantitative and precise model is underway in our laboratory.


RSC Advances | 2015

Evaluation of the dynamic electrochemical stability of ionic liquid–metal interfaces against reactive oxygen species using an in situ electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance

Chunhui Xiao; Abdul Rehman; Xiangqun Zeng

The dynamic interactions between the electrochemically generated superoxide radical (O2˙−) and three structurally different ionic liquids (ILs) were characterized using an electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance (EQCM). We established the long-term stability of the interface (on the scale of hours and weeks) against the most ubiquitous interferent in electrochemical energy devices and sensors: oxygen. Oxygen potentially limits the application of IL electrolytes in these devices. In particular, the electrochemical behavior of the O2/O2˙− couple and the ion pair formed between the cation of an IL and O2˙− were evaluated. O2˙− tends to form ion pair complexes with the cation of an IL, subsequently abstracting a proton to form different products depending on the cationic structure of the IL used. The reversibility of the O2/O2˙− electrode reaction depends on the subsequent chemical reactions between O2˙− and the IL, which are more pronounced at slow scan rates. It was found that O2˙− was significantly more stable in the IL with the [BMPY] cation than in ILs with imidazolium salts. The stability of the ILs towards O2˙− attack follows the order [BMPY][NTf2] > [BdMIM][NTf2] > [BMIM][NTf2] as evaluated on a time-scale of a few seconds to minutes and up to 3 weeks. It was found that the formation of the [Cation]⋯O2˙− ion pair complex lowers the local viscosity of the IL near the electrode, reflected in the change in the oscillating frequency of the quartz crystal electrode. As much as is the feasibility for the formation of this ion pair, that much is the tendency of the IL to lose its electrochemical stability. A combined analysis can provide a quick indication of the dynamic stability of the electrode–electrolyte interface for any IL in the presence of certain electrochemical reactions using the EQCM technique.

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Naseer Iqbal

COMSATS Institute of Information Technology

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Liang Tan

University of Rochester

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Peiling Lin

University of Rochester

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Abbas Saeed Hakeem

King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals

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Muhammad Ali Ehsan

King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals

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