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Dive into the research topics where Joshua Lehr is active.

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Featured researches published by Joshua Lehr.


Langmuir | 2009

Reaction of gold substrates with diazonium salts in acidic solution at open-circuit potential.

Joshua Lehr; Bryce E. Williamson; Benjamin S. Flavel; Alison J. Downard

The reaction of gold substrates with p-nitrobenzene diazonium tetrafluoroborate (NBD) in 0.1 M H(2)SO(4) at open-circuit potential (OCP) is demonstrated to proceed by electron transfer from gold to the NBD cation. Electrochemical, atomic force microscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analyses reveal the formation of multilayer films with the same composition as electrografted films. The film growth characteristics (surface concentration and film thickness vs time) also follow those observed during electrografting, consistent with electron transfer from the substrate to the diazonium cation. The OCP of the gold substrate increases during the period of film growth ( approximately 60 min) and then decreases to close to its initial value. The increase corresponds to accumulation of positive charge as electrons are transferred to NBD; the discharge process is tentatively attributed to slow oxidation of adventitious impurities in the reaction solution. Films formed at OCP or by electrografting from aqueous acid solution are markedly less stable to sonication in acetonitrile than are those electrografted from acetonitrile. Increased amounts of physisorbed material in films prepared in aqueous media or bonding of aryl groups to different gold sites in the two media are tentatively proposed to account for the different stabilities.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

Label-free Capacitive Diagnostics: Exploiting Local Redox Probe State Occupancy

Joshua Lehr; Flávio C. Bedatty Fernandes; Paulo Roberto Bueno; Jason J. Davis

An electrode surface confined redox group contributes to a substantial potential-dependent interfacial charging that can be sensitively probed and frequency-resolved by impedance-derived capacitance spectroscopy. In utilizing the sensitivity of this charging fingerprint to redox group environment, one can seek to generate derived sensory configurations. Exemplified here through the generation of mixed molecular films comprising ferrocene and antibody receptors to two clinically important targets, the label-free methodology is able to report on human prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP), a tumor marker, with a limit of detection of 11 pM and C-reactive protein with a limit of detection of 28 pM. Both assays exhibit linear ranges encompassing those of clinical value.


Analytical Chemistry | 2010

Patterning of metal, carbon, and semiconductor substrates with thin organic films by microcontact printing with aryldiazonium salt inks.

Joshua Lehr; David J. Garrett; Matthew G. Paulik; Benjamin S. Flavel; Paula A. Brooksby; Bryce E. Williamson; Alison J. Downard

Surface modification through reduction of aryldiazonium salts to give covalently attached layers is a widely investigated procedure. However, realization of potential applications of the layers requires development of patterning methods. Here, we demonstrate that microcontact printing with poly(dimethylsiloxane) stamps inked with aqueous acid solutions of aryldiazonium salts gives stable organic layers on gold, copper, silicon, and graphitic carbon surfaces. Depending on the substrate-diazonium salt combination, the layers range from relatively irregular multilayers to smooth films with close to monolayer thickness. After printing, surface attached aminophenyl and carboxyphenyl groups retain their usual reactivity toward amide bond formation with solution species, and hence, the method is a simple route to patterned, covalently attached, reactive tether layers. Multicomponent patterned films can be prepared by printing a second modifier onto a film-coated surface. Microcontact printing using aryldiazonium salt inks is experimentally very simple and is applicable to the broad range of substrates capable of spontaneously reducing aryldiazonium salts.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2013

Anion sensing by solution- and surface-assembled osmium(II) bipyridyl rotaxanes.

Joshua Lehr; Thomas Lang; Octavia A. Blackburn; Timothy A. Barendt; Stephen Faulkner; Jason J. Davis; Paul D. Beer

We report the preparation of [2]rotaxanes containing an electrochemically and optically active osmium(II) bipyridyl macrocyclic component mechanically bonded with cationic pyridinium axles. Such interlocked host systems are demonstrated to recognise and sense anionic guest species as shown by 1H NMR, luminescence and electrochemical studies. The rotaxanes can be surface assembled on to gold electrodes through anion templation under click copper(I)-catalysed Huisgen cycloaddition conditions to form rotaxane molecular films, which, after template removal, respond electrochemically and selectively to chloride.


Langmuir | 2013

Reversible Recruitment and Emission of DO3A-Derived Lanthanide Complexes at Ligating Molecular Films on Gold

Joshua Lehr; Jamie Bennett; Manuel Tropiano; Thomas Just Sørensen; Stephen Faulkner; Paul D. Beer; Jason J. Davis

The recruitment of DO3A-derived lanthanide complexes by ligation to isophthalic acid and catechol-modified gold surfaces, and their resulting sensitization, is reported herein. Predictably pH-dependent surface recruitment is associated with the expected fingerprint europium and terbium emission characteristics. The intensity of the lanthanide luminescence scales exponentially with spacer length, indicating a strong quenching interaction between the lanthanide and the gold surface. The switchable catechol oxidation state provides a means of electrochemically triggering the release of prior ligated complexes.


Bioelectrochemistry | 2010

Dependence of catalytic activity and long-term stability of enzyme hydrogel films on curing time

Joshua Lehr; Bryce E. Williamson; Frédéric Barrière; Alison J. Downard

Enzyme hydrogels were prepared on carbon film electrodes using glucose oxidase and an epoxide crosslinking agent. The catalytic activity of the gels was found to depend strongly on curing time. The competing effects of increased mechanical stability and decreased enzyme activity as curing time increases resulted in the highest catalytic activity for films cured for 24h at 25 degrees C. Weekly electrochemical measurements established that the long-term stabilities of all hydrogels cured for 24-72 h were similar, with close to half of the initial catalytic activity being retained after immersion for 3 months in agitated phosphate buffer solution at 25 degrees C.


Langmuir | 2014

Formation of Thick Aminophenyl Films from Aminobenzenediazonium Ion in the Absence of a Reduction Source

Bradley M. Simons; Joshua Lehr; David J. Garrett; Alison J. Downard

Aminophenyl films, electrografted to conducting substrates from a solution of the corresponding diazonium ion, are a useful platform for building up functional surfaces. In our hands, reproducible preparation of aminophenyl films via electrografting is difficult, suggesting competing grafting pathways. To investigate the grafting process without the possibility of reduction of the diazonium ion by the substrate, we have used a spin-coated and cured SU-8 substrate that is nonconducting and very smooth (rms surface roughness 0.43 nm). After in situ formation of the aminobenzenediazonium ion (50 mM) in acidic solution, the substrate was added to the solution in the presence and absence of reducing agents (hypophosphorous acid and iron powder). At short reaction times, the films prepared with and without reducing agent have the same thickness and composition (as revealed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy). However, in the presence of a reducing agent, films reach a limiting thickness of 7-8 nm after 10 min, whereas, in the absence of a reducing agent, strong film growth continues, giving a film thickness of 14 nm after 120 min. This behavior contrasts with that of other diazonium ions which, in the absence of an applied potential, a reducing agent, or a reducing substrate, give only very thin films after long reaction times.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Graphene oxide interfaces in serum based autoantibody quantification.

Qiao Xu; Ho Cheng; Joshua Lehr; Amol V. Patil; Jason J. Davis

A reliable quantification of protein markers will undoubtedly underpin profound developments in disease surveillance, diagnostics, and improved therapy. Although there potentially exist numerous means of achieving this, electrochemical impedimetric techniques offer scale of sensitivity, cost, convenience, and a flexibility with which few alternatives can compete. Though there have been marked developments in electroanalytical protein detection, the demands associated with accessing the inherent assay sensitivity in complex biological media largely remains. We report herein the use of cysteamine-graphene oxide modified gold microelectrode arrays in underpinning the ultrasensitive and entirely label free non-faradaic quantification of Parkinsons-relevant autoantibodies in human serum.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2007

Microcontact Printing Using the Spontaneous Reduction of Aryldiazonium Salts

David J. Garrett; Joshua Lehr; Gordon M. Miskelly; Alison J. Downard


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2011

Spontaneous Grafting of Nitrophenyl Groups to Planar Glassy Carbon Substrates: Evidence for Two Mechanisms

Joshua Lehr; Bryce E. Williamson; Alison J. Downard

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Alison J. Downard

MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology

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Benjamin S. Flavel

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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