Matthias Bäcker
FH Aachen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Matthias Bäcker.
Journal of Biotechnology | 2013
Matthias Bäcker; D. Rakowski; Arshak Poghossian; Manfred Biselli; Patrick Wagner; Michael J. Schöning
A microfluidic chip integrating amperometric enzyme sensors for the detection of glucose, glutamate and glutamine in cell-culture fermentation processes has been developed. The enzymes glucose oxidase, glutamate oxidase and glutaminase were immobilized by means of cross-linking with glutaraldehyde on platinum thin-film electrodes integrated within a microfluidic channel. The biosensor chip was coupled to a flow-injection analysis system for electrochemical characterization of the sensors. The sensors have been characterized in terms of sensitivity, linear working range and detection limit. The sensitivity evaluated from the respective peak areas was 1.47, 3.68 and 0.28 μAs/mM for the glucose, glutamate and glutamine sensor, respectively. The calibration curves were linear up to a concentration of 20 mM glucose and glutamine and up to 10 mM for glutamate. The lower detection limit amounted to be 0.05 mM for the glucose and glutamate sensor, respectively, and 0.1 mM for the glutamine sensor. Experiments in cell-culture medium have demonstrated a good correlation between the glutamate, glutamine and glucose concentrations measured with the chip-based biosensors in a differential-mode and the commercially available instrumentation. The obtained results demonstrate the feasibility of the realized microfluidic biosensor chip for monitoring of bioprocesses.
Analytical Chemistry | 2015
Sebastian Schusser; Maximilian Krischer; Matthias Bäcker; Arshak Poghossian; Patrick Wagner; Michael J. Schöning
Designing novel or optimizing existing biodegradable polymers for biomedical applications requires numerous tests on the effect of substances on the degradation process. In the present work, polymer-modified electrolyte-insulator-semiconductor (PMEIS) sensors have been applied for monitoring an enzymatically catalyzed degradation of polymers for the first time. The thin films of biodegradable polymer poly(D,L-lactic acid) and enzyme lipase were used as a model system. During degradation, the sensors were read-out by means of impedance spectroscopy. In order to interpret the data obtained from impedance measurements, an electrical equivalent circuit model was developed. In addition, morphological investigations of the polymer surface have been performed by means of in situ atomic force microscopy. The sensor signal change, which reflects the progress of degradation, indicates an accelerated degradation in the presence of the enzyme compared to hydrolysis in neutral pH buffer media. The degradation rate increases with increasing enzyme concentration. The obtained results demonstrate the potential of PMEIS sensors as a very promising tool for in situ and real-time monitoring of degradation of polymers.
MRS Proceedings | 2009
Matthias Bäcker; Arshak Poghossian; Maryam H. Abouzar; Sylvia Wenmackers; Stoffel D. Janssens; Ken Haenen; Patrick Wagner; Michael J. Schoening
Capacitive field-effect electrolyte-diamond-insulator-semiconductor (EDIS) structures with Oterminated nanocrystalline diamond (NCD) as sensitive gate material have been realized and investigated for the detection of pH, penicillin concentration, and layer-by-layer adsorption of polyelectrolytes. The surface oxidizing procedure of NCD thin films as well as the seeding and NCD growth process on a Si-SiO 2 substrate have been improved to provide high pH-sensitive, non-porous thin films without damage of the underlying SiO 2 layer and with a high coverage of O-terminated sites. The NCD surface topography, roughness, and coverage of the surface groups have been characterized by SEM, AFM and XPS methods. The EDIS sensors with O-terminated NCD film treated in oxidizing boiling mixture for 45 min show a pH sensitivity of about 50 mV/pH. The pH-sensitive properties of the NCD have been used to develop an EDIS-based penicillin biosensor with high sensitivity (65-70 mV/decade in the concentration range of 0.252.5 mM penicillin G) and low detection limit (5 µM). The results of label-free electrical detection of layer-by-layer adsorption of charged polyelectrolytes are presented, too.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2009
José R. Siqueira; Carl Frederik Werner; Matthias Bäcker; Arshak Poghossian; Valtencir Zucolotto; Osvaldo N. Oliveira; Michael J. Schöning
Physica Status Solidi (a) | 2009
José R. Siqueira; Maryam H. Abouzar; Matthias Bäcker; Valtencir Zucolotto; Arshak Poghossian; Osvaldo N. Oliveira; Michael J. Schöning
Physica Status Solidi (a) | 2010
José R. Siqueira; Matthias Bäcker; Arshak Poghossian; Valtencir Zucolotto; Osvaldo N. Oliveira; Michael J. Schöning
Nanoscale | 2015
Arshak Poghossian; Matthias Bäcker; Dirk Mayer; Michael J. Schöning
Physica Status Solidi (a) | 2014
Chunsheng Wu; Thomas S. Bronder; Arshak Poghossian; Carl Frederik Werner; Matthias Bäcker; Michael J. Schöning
Physica Status Solidi (a) | 2012
Matthias Bäcker; M. Raue; Sebastian Schusser; C. Jeitner; L. Breuer; Patrick Wagner; Arshak Poghossian; A. Förster; Thomas Mang; Michael J. Schöning
Electrochimica Acta | 2011
Matthias Bäcker; L. Delle; Arshak Poghossian; Manfred Biselli; Werner Zang; Patrick Wagner; Michael J. Schöning