Australia

Archer Materials graphene ink formulations printed and tested with prototype device

Archer Materials Ltd (ASX:AXE) has progressed its graphene-based biosensor technology development by building a first-phase prototype device to test the printing and performance of graphene inks.

Graphene ink formulations produced from the inventory of Carbon Allotropes, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Archer, have been successfully printed and tested in a prototype device for biosensing.

This printing process could potentially be translated to automated screen-printing market competitive, low-cost prototype manufacturing.

Early milestone

The prototype demonstrates a key early-stage milestone for Archer in validating the viability of graphene inks functionality and use for biosensor applications.

Archer CEO Dr Mohammad Choucair said: “We have reached a key development milestone towards commercially exploiting the IP underpinning the graphene-based biosensor technology.

“This achievement provides support for a full patent application, that would give Archer exclusive rights to commercially benefit from the IP.

“The materials and processes used to build the prototypes are not prohibitively expensive, which is an advantage in the printable biosensor market.”

Array of electrodes

This biosensor technology was built at the University of Adelaide ARC Graphene Hub.

Each prototype circuit board integrates an array of 32 gold-coated-nickel interdigitated electrodes, which are connected to a computer to monitor, test, and collect data in real-time.

The electrodes are prototyping components and the final design and chemistry of these are subject to change.

Graphene inks are printed directly onto the electrodes using aligned extrusion printing to create the sensors.

Electrochemical properties

The sensors displayed excellent electrochemical properties, which is a fundamental requirement for Archers biosensing technology.

A functional biosensor still requires the measurement of biomolecules on the graphene surface.

Graphene inks were printed and patterned as interdigitated electrodes on various substrates to demonstrate versatility and robustness, including transparent and flexible materials for biosensing applications.

Printed Graphene interdigitated electrodes (black patterns) patterned with micronsized features on a flexible film substrate.

The high-quality graphene used in the graphene ink formulations is prepared from non-graphitic feedstocks and is available in the inventory of Carbon Allotropes.

Strengthened IP position

Using in-house alternatives to graphite for processing graphene inks strengthens Archers independent IP ownership position.

The quantity and quality of the non-graphitic graphene used is suitable for rapid prototyping and future device integration.

Archer maintains 100% ownership of the provisional patent lodged to protect the graphene inks and prototype technology intellectual property (IP).

Development focus

The development focus is on manufacturing a commercially viable graphene-based biosensor technology and the registration ofRead More – Source

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