| Literature DB >> 12553767 |
Wei Zhan1, Julio Alvarez, Richard M Crooks.
Abstract
This paper describes a new approach for sensing electrochemically active substrates in microfluidic systems. This two-electrode sensor relies on electrochemical detection at one electrode and electrogenerated chemiluminescent (ECL) reporting at the other. Each microfabricated indium tin oxide electrode is located in a separate microfluidic channel, but the channels are connected downstream of the electrodes to maintain a complete electrical circuit. Because of laminar flow, there is no bulk mixing of the fluids in the detecting and reporting channels. This approach allows the ECL reaction to be physically and chemically decoupled from the sensing channel of the device, which greatly expands the number of analytes that can be detected. However, because the cathode and anode are connected, electron-transfer processes occurring at the sensing electrode are electrically coupled to the ECL reaction. Charge balance permits the ECL light output to be quantitatively correlated to electrochemical reductions at the cathode. The system is used to detect Fe(CN)6(3-), Ru(NH3)6(3+), and benzyl viologen and report their presence via Ru(bpy)3(2+) (bpy = bipyridine) luminescence. Each different redox target initiates ECL at a unique potential bias related to its standard redox potential. The influence of the concentrations of Ru(bpy)3(2+) and the target analytes is discussed.Entities:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12553767 DOI: 10.1021/ac020488h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Chem ISSN: 0003-2700 Impact factor: 6.986