| Literature DB >> 29890706 |
Alejandro García-Miranda Ferrari1,2, Christopher W Foster3,4, Peter J Kelly5, Dale A C Brownson6,7, Craig E Banks8,9.
Abstract
Screen-printed electrochemical sensing platforms, due to their scales of economy and high reproducibility, can provide a useful approach to translate laboratory-based electrochemistry into the field. An important factor when utilising screen-printed electrodes (SPEs) is the determination of their real electrochemical surface area, which allows for the benchmarking of these SPEs and is an important parameter in quality control. In this paper, we consider the use of cyclic voltammetry and chronocoulometry to allow for the determination of the real electrochemical area of screen-printed electrochemical sensing platforms, highlighting to experimentalists the various parameters that need to be diligently considered and controlled in order to obtain useful measurements of the real electroactive area.Entities:
Keywords: Anson plot; Randles–Ševćik; chronocoulometry; cyclic voltammetry; real electroactive area; screen-printed electrodes
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29890706 PMCID: PMC6023085 DOI: 10.3390/bios8020053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Cyclic voltammetry of 1 mM RuHex (A); 1 mM NADH (B); 1 mM dopamine (C); 1 mM capsaicin (D); 1 mM TMPD (E) and 1 mM ascorbic acid (F) at 0.05 V s−1 (vs. SCE) and 19.6 °C. The arrow indicates the forward peak selected to calculate the A with Equations (2) and (3).
Calculated electrode areas (A) for SPEs using the Randles–Ševćik equations (Equation (2) for quasi-reversible processes of RuHex, TMPD, and capsaicin and Equation (3) for irreversible processes such as NADH, dopamine, and ascorbic acid; note that dopamine has anodic and cathodic processes but is termed irreversible because of the relative rates of electron transfer and mass transport [31]; recorded at 19.6 °C for each redox probe, with the diffusion coefficient used in the calculation. The %Real, which is the percentage of A divided by the A, is also presented (N = 3).
| Electroactive Probe | Electrode Area Randles–Ševćik/cm2 | D/cm2 s−1 | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| RuHex | 0.062 | 9.10 × 10−6 | 83.25 |
| NADH | 0.049 | 7.40 × 10−6 | 65.47 |
| Dopamine | 0.090 | 6.74 × 10−6 | 120.18 |
| Capsaicin | 0.093 | 7.03 × 10−6 | 123.74 |
| TMPD | 0.057 | 6.32 × 10−6 | 75.64 |
| Ascorbic acid | 0.109 | 1.42 × 10−6 | 145.65 |
Figure 2Classification of redox systems by Mcreery et al. [39] according to their kinetic sensitivity to particular surface modifications upon carbon electrodes. The figure has been adapted by the authors of this paper to clearly show outer- and inner-sphere probes. Fc: ferrocene, MV: methyl viologen, CPZ: chlorpromazine, and MB: methylene blue.
Figure 3Representation of CC (charge vs. time1/2) for a non-adsorbed outer-sphere probe (A) and for an adsorbed inner-sphere probe (B). Note that, in (A), the intercept is not truly zero due to the contribution of (see Equations (6) and (7)).
Figure 4Anson plots resulting from using the following redox probes: 1 mM RuHex (A); 1 mM NADH (B); 1 mM dopamine (C); 1 mM capsaicin (D); 1 mM TMPD (E) and 1 mM ascorbic acid; (F) at 19.6 °C. The results of three different SPEs are presented.
Calculated electrode areas (A) for SPEs using the Anson plot equations (Equations (6) and (7)) recorded at 19.6 °C for each redox probe, with the diffusion coefficient used in the calculation. The %Real, which is the percentage of A divided by the A, is also presented (N = 3).
| Electroactive Probe | Electrode Area Anson/cm2 | D/cm2 s−1 | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| RuHex | 0.055 | 9.40 × 10−6 | 73.34 |
| NADH | 0.077 | 7.40 × 10−6 | 103.27 |
| Dopamine | 0.077 | 6.74 × 10−6 | 102.51 |
| Capsaicin | 0.057 | 7.03 × 10−6 | 75.91 |
| TMPD | 0.053 | 6.32 × 10−6 | 70.53 |
| Ascorbic acid | 0.121 | 1.42 × 10−6 | 161.21 |