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Dive into the research topics where Vijayender Bhalla is active.

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Featured researches published by Vijayender Bhalla.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2013

Bio-functionalized graphene-graphene oxide nanocomposite based electrochemical immunosensing

Priyanka Sharma; Satish K. Tuteja; Vijayender Bhalla; Gajendra Shekhawat; Vinayak P. Dravid; C. Raman Suri

We report a novel in-situ electrochemical synthesis approach for the formation of functionalized graphene-graphene oxide (fG-GO) nanocomposite on screen-printed electrodes (SPE). Electrochemically controlled nanocomposite film formation was studied by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and Raman spectroscopy. Further insight into the nanocomposite has been accomplished by the Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), thermal gravimetric analysis (TGA) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) spectroscopy. Configured as a highly responsive screen-printed immunosensor, the fG-GO nanocomposite on SPE exhibits electrical and chemical synergies of the nano-hybrid functional construct by combining good electronic properties of functionalized graphene (fG) and the facile chemical functionality of graphene oxide (GO) for compatible bio-interface development using specific anti-diuron antibody. The enhanced electrical properties of nanocomposite biofilm demonstrated a significant increase in electrochemical signal response in a competitive inhibition immunoassay format for diuron detection, promising its potential applicability for ultra-sensitive detection of range of target analytes.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2011

A novel disposable electrochemical immunosensor for phenyl urea herbicide diuron.

Priyanka Sharma; Kavita Sablok; Vijayender Bhalla; C. Raman Suri

A disposable electrochemical immunosensor has been developed for the determination of phenyl urea herbicide-diuron using a low cost laser ablated gold electrodes (LC-LAGE) fabricated on polystyrene substrate. The electrodes were electrochemically deposited with prussian blue-gold nanoparticle (PB-GNP) film, and a competitive inhibition immunoassay was performed on LC-LAGE by using a specific hapten-protein conjugate. The binding of available diuron specific antibody on conjugate coated electrode was detected using alkaline phosphatase rabbit anti-IgG antibody. The addition of 1-naphthyl phosphate substrate resulted in the production of electrochemically active product, 1-naphthol, which was monitored using square wave voltammetry technique. The assay exhibited an excellent sensitivity and specificity showing the dynamic response range between 1 ppt and 10 ppm for diuron with detection limit around 1 ppt. This study provides insight into development of a rapid and high-throughput screening of pesticides in environmental samples at a very low cost.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2013

Amine functionalized graphene oxide/CNT nanocomposite for ultrasensitive electrochemical detection of trinitrotoluene

Kavita Sablok; Vijayender Bhalla; Priyanka Sharma; Roohi Kaushal; Shilpa Chaudhary; C. Raman Suri

Binding of electron-deficient trinitrotoluene (TNT) to the electron rich amine groups on a substrate form specific charge-transfer Jackson-Meisenheimer (JM) complex. In the present work, we report formation of specific JM complex on amine functionalized reduced graphene oxide/carbon nanotubes- (a-rGO/CNT) nanocomposite leading to sensitive detection of TNT. The CNT were dispersed using graphene oxide that provides excellent dispersion by attaching to CNT through its hydrophobic domains and solubilizes through the available OH and COOH groups on screen printed electrode (SPE). The GO was reduced electrochemically to form reduced graphene that remarkably increases electrochemical properties owing to the intercalation of high aspect CNT on graphene flakes as shown by TEM micrograph. The surface amine functionalization of dropcasted and rGO/CNT was carried out using a bi-functional cross linker ethylenediamine. The extent of amine functionalization on modified electrodes was confirmed using energy dispersive X-ray (EDX), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and confocal microscopy. The FTIR and Raman spectra further suggested the formation of JM complex between amine functionalized electrodes and TNT leading to a shift in peak intensity together with peak broadening. The a-rGO/CNT nanocomposite prepared electrode surface leads to ultra-trace detection of TNT upto 0.01 ppb with good reproducibility (n=3). The a-rGO/CNT sensing platform could be an alternate for sensitive detection of TNT explosive for various security and environmental applications.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Enhancing electrochemical detection on graphene oxide-CNT nanostructured electrodes using magneto-nanobioprobes

Priyanka Sharma; Vijayender Bhalla; Vinayak P. Dravid; Gajendera Shekhawat; Jinsong-Wu; E. Senthil Prasad; C. Raman Suri

Graphene and related materials have come to the forefront of research in electrochemical sensors during recent years due to the promising properties of these nanomaterials. Further applications of these nanomaterials have been hampered by insufficient sensitivity offered by these nanohybrids for the type of molecules requiring lower detection ranges. Here, we report a signal amplification strategy based on magneto-electrochemical immunoassay which combines the advantages of carbon nanotube and reduced graphene oxide together with electrochemical bursting of magnetic nanoparticles into a large number of metal ions. Sensitive detection was achieved by precisely designing the nanohybrid and correlating the available metal ions with analyte concentration. We confirmed the ultrahigh sensitivity of this method for a new generation herbicide diuron and its analogues up to sub-picomolar concentration in standard water samples. The novel immune-detection platform showed the excellent potential applicability in rapid and sensitive screening of environmental pollutants or toxins in samples.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2014

Graphene-gated biochip for the detection of cardiac marker Troponin I

Satish K. Tuteja; Priyanka; Vijayender Bhalla; Akash Deep; A.K. Paul; C. Raman Suri

We report lithium ion intercalation mediated efficient exfoliation of graphite to form monolithic graphene sheets which have subsequently been investigated for the development of highly sensitive label-free electrochemical detection platform for cardiac biomarker, Troponin I (cTnI). The spectroscopic and morphological analysis demonstrated the formation of defect free graphene sheets which were successfully employed to fabricate an inter-digited microdevice in a drain-source configuration on a silicon biochip. The graphene gated biochip functionalized with anti-cTnI antibodies used in label free detection of cTnI which exhibited an excellent sensitivity in the picogram range (~1 pg mL(-1)) for cTnI without the use of any enzymatic amplification that promises its potential applicability for bio-molecular detection in clinical diagnosis.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2011

Self-assembly and sensor response of photosynthetic reaction centers on screen-printed electrodes

Vijayender Bhalla; Valter Zazubovich

Photosynthetic reaction centers were immobilized onto gold screen-printed electrodes (Au-SPEs) using a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) of mercaptopropionic acid (MPA) which was deliberately defective in order to achieve effective mediator transfer to the electrodes. The pure Photosystem II (PS II) cores from spinach immobilize onto the electrodes very efficiently but fair badly in terms of photocurrent response (measured using duroquinone as the redox mediator). The cruder preparation of PS II known as BBY particles performs significantly better under the same experimental conditions and shows a photocurrent response of 20-35 nA (depending on preparation) per screen-printed electrode surface (12.5mm(2)). The data was corroborated using AFM, showing that in the case of BBY particles a defective biolayer is indeed formed, with grooves spanning the whole thickness of the layer enhancing the possibility of mass transfer to the electrodes and enabling biosensing. In comparison, the PS II core layer showed ultra-dense organization, with additional formation of aggregates on top of the single protein layer, thus blocking mediator access to the electrodes and/or binding sites. The defective monolayer biosensor with BBY particles was successfully applied for the detection of photosynthesis inhibitors, demonstrating that the inhibitor binding site remained accessible to both the inhibitor and the external redox mediator. Biosensing was demonstrated using picric acid and atrazine. The detection limits were 1.15 nM for atrazine and 157 nM for picric acid.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

Hybrid aptamer-antibody linked fluorescence resonance energy transfer based detection of trinitrotoluene.

Priyanka Sabherwal; Munish Shorie; Preeti Pathania; Shilpa Chaudhary; K.K. Bhasin; Vijayender Bhalla; C. Raman Suri

Combining synthetic macromolecules and biomolecular recognition units are promising in developing novel diagnostic and analysis techniques for detecting environmental and/or clinically important substances. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) apta-immunosensor for explosive detection is reported using 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) specific aptamer and antibodies tagged with respective FRET pair dyes in a sandwich immunoassay format. FITC-labeled aptamer was used as a binder molecule in the newly developed apta-immunoassay format where the recognition element was specific anti-TNT antibody labeled with rhodamine isothiocyanate. The newly developed sensing platform showed excellent sensitivity with a detection limit of the order of 0.4 nM presenting a promising candidate for routine screening of TNT in samples.


Analyst | 2012

Rapid extraction and quantitative detection of the herbicide diuron in surface water by a hapten-functionalized carbon nanotubes based electrochemical analyzer

Priyanka Sharma; Vijayender Bhalla; Satish K. Tuteja; Manil Kukkar; C. Raman Suri

A solid phase extraction micro-cartridge containing a non-polar polystyrene absorbent matrix was coupled with an electrochemical immunoassay analyzer (EIA) and used for the ultra-sensitive detection of the phenyl urea herbicide diuron in real samples. The EIA was fabricated by using carboxylated carbon nanotubes (CNTs) functionalized with a hapten molecule (an amine functionalized diuron derivative). Screen printed electrodes (SPE) were modified with these haptenized CNTs and specific in-house generated anti diuron antibodies were used for bio-interface development. The immunodetection was realized in a competitive electrochemical immunoassay format using alkaline phosphatase labeled secondary anti-IgG antibody. The addition of 1-naphthyl phosphate substrate resulted in the production of an electrochemically active product, 1-naphthol, which was monitored by using differential pulse voltammetry (DPV). The assay exhibited excellent sensitivity and specificity having a dynamic response range of 0.01 pg mL(-1) to 10 μg mL(-1) for diuron with a limit of detection of around 0.1 pg mL(-1) (n = 3) in standard water samples. The micro-cartridge coupled hapten-CNTs modified SPE provided an effective and efficient electrochemical immunoassay for the real-time monitoring of pesticides samples with a very high degree of sensitivity.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2013

CdTe nanobioprobe based optoelectrochemical immunodetection of diabetic marker HbA1c.

Adity Chopra; Satish K. Tuteja; Naresh Sachdeva; K.K. Bhasin; Vijayender Bhalla; C. Raman Suri

Highly luminescent water soluble CdTe quantum dots (QDs) were synthesized and conjugated with anti-HbA1c antibody to generate specific nanobioprobe. A sandwich immunoassay model was employed using capture HbA1c antibody as a specific receptor molecule and the QD-labeled secondary antibody as a dual (fluorescence cum electrochemical) tracer to quantify the concentration of HbA1c. A linear increase in current was observed for HbA1c analytical standards with a R(2) value of 0.990 and coefficient of variance ~5%. A comparison between HPLC and dual immunoassay for clinical samples showed a correlation coefficient of 89% and 96% for fluorescence and electrochemical detection methods respectively. The QD-based immunoassay shows great promise for rapid reproducible and cost effective analysis of HbA1c in clinical samples.


Chemical Communications | 2014

Nanobioprobe mediated DNA aptamers for explosive detection

Priyanka; Munish Shorie; Vijayender Bhalla; Preeti Pathania; C. Raman Suri

Specific nucleic acid aptamers using the microtiter plate based modified SELEX method against explosive trinitrotoluene are reported. Efficient partitioning of dsDNA was carried out using streptavidin labeled gold nanoprobes for the selection of specific aptamers. The selected binders having an affinity of ~10(-7) M were used in the newly developed electrochemical aptasensor, exhibiting a detection limit of around 1 ppb for trinitrotoluene.

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C. Raman Suri

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Priyanka Sharma

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Adity Chopra

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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E. Senthil Prasad

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Kavita Sablok

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Munish Shorie

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Preeti Pathania

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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