https://www.selleckchem.com/TGF-beta.html The calculations illustrate that this conjugation is interrupted in a GCC acetic acid system, providing an explanation for the absence of a cyclic voltammetry peak corresponding to PCET at this acid site. This combined theoretical and experimental study demonstrates the critical role of continuous conjugation and strong electronic coupling between the GCC acid site and the graphite to enable interfacial field-driven PCET at the acid site. Understanding the connection between the atomic structure of the surface and the interfacial electrostatic potentials and fields that govern PCET thermochemistry may guide heterogeneous catalyst design.Protein biomolecules are used as markers for various diseases and infections and are targets in biosensing research and development. One of the highest-sensitivity biosensing techniques is considered to be fluorescence (FL) sensing. However, to our knowledge, no study has shown that all-dielectric metasurfaces can contribute to highly sensitive FL sensing. Here, we introduce an efficient type of FL-sensing platforms and show that all-dielectric metasurface FL biosensors are able to directly detect a representative antibody, immunoglobulin G, at very small concentrations on the order of pg/mL or tens of femtomolars. Furthermore, it is shown that they work efficiently as an indirect detection platform for standard cancer marker antigens, such as carcinoembryonic antigens, at concentrations well below the medical diagnosis criterion at 5 ng/mL. Importantly, the metasurface biosensors simultaneously suppress inhomogeneous FL responses, exhibit high reproducibility, and retain sensitivity, even in human serum. These results indicate that the present metasurface FL biosensors provide a high-sensitivity practical platform, suggesting that they are a better option than the commercially standard of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays.Reversing the polarity in molecules is a versatile tool for expanding