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            Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 24, 2026
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            Biomolecular adsorption has great significance in medical, environmental, and technological processes. Understanding adsorption equilibrium and binding kinetics is essential for advanced process implementation. This requires identifying intrinsic determinants that predict optimal adsorption properties at bio–hybrid interfaces. Solid-binding peptides (SBPs) have targetable intrinsic properties involving peptide–peptide and peptide–solid interactions, which result in high-affinity material-selective binding. Atomic force microscopy investigations confirmed this complex interplay of multi-step peptide assemblies in a cooperative modus. Yet, most studies report adsorption properties of SBPs using non-cooperative or single-step adsorption models. Using non-cooperative kinetic models for predicting cooperative self-assembly behavior creates an oversimplified view of peptide adsorption, restricting implementing SBPs beyond their current use. To address these limitations and provide insight into surface-level events during self-assembly, a novel method, the Frequency Response Cooperativity model, was developed. This model iteratively fits adsorption data through spectral analysis of several time-dependent kinetic parameters. The model, applied to a widely used gold-binding peptide data obtained using a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation, verified multi-step assembly. Peak deconvolution of spectral plots revealed distinct differences in the size and distribution of the kinetic rates present during adsorption across the concentrations. This approach provides new fundamental insights into the intricate dynamics of self-assembly of biomolecules on surfaces.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
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            Abstract In the carbon nanotubes film/graphene heterostructure decorated with catalytic Pt nanoparticles using atomic layer deposition (Pt-NPs/CNTs/Gr) H 2 sensors, the CNT film determines the effective sensing area and the signal transport to Gr channel. The former requires a large CNT aspect ratio for a higher sensing area while the latter demands high electric conductivity for efficient charge transport. Considering the CNT’s aspect ratio decreases, while its conductivity increases ( i.e. , bandgap decreases), with the CNT diameter, it is important to understand how quantitatively these effects impact the performance of the Pt-NPs/CNTs/Gr nanohybrids sensors. Motivated by this, this work presents a systematic study of the Pt-NPs/CNTs/Gr H 2 sensor performance with the CNT films made from different constituent CNTs of diameters ranging from 1 nm for single-wall CNTs, to 2 nm for double-wall CNTs, and to 10–30 nm for multi-wall CNTs (MWCNTs). By measuring the morphology and electric conductivity of SWCNT, DWCNT and MWCNT films, this work aims to reveal the quantitative correlation between the sensor performance and relevant CNT properties. Interestingly, the best performance is obtained on Pt-NPs/MWCNTs/Gr H 2 sensors, which can be attributed to the compromise of the effective sensing area and electric conductivity on MWCNT films and illustrates the importance of optimizing sensor design.more » « less
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            Nanohybrids of graphene and two-dimensional (2D) layered transition metal dichalcogenides (TMD) nanostructures can provide a promising substrate for extraordinary surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) due to the combined electromagnetic enhancement on TMD nanostructures via localized surface plasmonic resonance (LSPR) and chemical enhancement on graphene. In these nanohybrid SERS substrates, the LSPR on TMD nanostructures is affected by the TMD morphology. Herein, we report the first successful growth of MoS2 nanodonuts (N-donuts) on graphene using a vapor transport process on graphene. Using Rhodamine 6G (R6G) as a probe, SERS spectra were compared on MoS2 N-donuts/graphene nanohybrids substrates. A remarkably high R6G SERS sensitivity up to 2 × 10−12 M has been obtained, which can be attributed to the more robust LSPR effect than in other TMD nanostructures such as nanodiscs as suggested by the finite-difference time-domain simulation. This result demonstrates that non-metallic TMD/graphene nanohybrids substrates can have SERS sensitivity up to one order of magnitude higher than that reported on the plasmonic metal nanostructures/2D materials SERS substrates, providing a promising scheme for high-sensitivity, low-cost applications for biosensing.more » « less
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