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Tor Vergata

The SensorsGroup at the University of Rome Tor Vergata joins people at the Department of Electronic Engineering and the Department of Chemical Science and Technology with the main mission of studying and developing innovative sensors and sensor systems ready for
applications.

Metalloporphyrins are a molecular family known and investigated since more than one century. They are in particular well-known for their role in living beings where they play key roles such as oxygen transportation in mammalian blood and photosynthesis in plants.

From a sensing point of view, these molecules are rather stable compounds and their properties can be finely tuned by simple modifications of their basic molecular structure. A metalloporphyrin offers a large variety of interaction mechanisms that can be exploited for chemical sensing. Hydrogen bonds, polarization, and polarity interactions are expected to take place between volatile molecules and the porphyrin.

Furthermore, coordination interactions takes place at the metal center in metalloporphyrin complexes. From this point of view, since almost all metals may be combined to form metalloporphyrin complexes, metalloporphyrins ligand properties enjoys a large versatility. The role of metal is of primary importance to determine the sensitivity and selectivity properties of the molecule. Particular molecular arrangement can also be assembled in order to provide metalloporhyrins with enhanced selectivity. To exploit in an artificial system the sensing properties of a sensing material it is essential to match the molecules with some transducer able to translate the interaction events into readable signals (usually electric). For this scope, it is necessary to consider which physical parameters of the porphyrin changes as a consequence of a binding event.

The most simple approach consists in considering the variation of mass. A film of metalloporphyrins indeed after the absorption of volatile compound is expected to change its mass. Devices able to measure the difference of mass of thin molecular films are actually available such as quartz microbalance (QMB) and surface acoustic wave (SAW). Another possibility is offered by the well known optical properties of metalloporphyrins whose relevant optical features can be modified as a consequence of a binding of a foreign molecule. An evidence of this can be obtained considering the change in blood color when oxygen and carbon dioxide are bound to hemoglobin.

Research topics

Chemical Sensors

  • Design and synthesis of artificial receptors
  • Porphyrins nanostructures
  • Porphyrins based sensors
  • Porphyrins functionalized Nanostructures
  • Biosensors
  • Mass, Optics, Impedance and Gated transducers
  • Kelvin Probe, Scanning microscopy, Optical methods

Artificial Olfaction and Taste

  • QMB and optical electronic nose
  • Potentiometric and optical electronic tongue
  • Applications to food analysis, Medical diagnosis, and environmental control

Data analysis

  • Chemometrics and Neural networks
  • Bio-inspired algorithms
  • Multispectral imaging
  • Application to sensors data, physiological and psychological data

Electronics for Sensors

  • Electronic design of sensors interface
  • Integration of multi sensors platforms
  • Data acquisition systems
  • Wireless sensors networks

Investigators

Prof. Sara Nardis

P.I. of the project

Prof. Manuela Stefanelli

Investigator

Dott.ssa Lorena Di Zazzo

Investigator