1. Cathodic detection of H2O2 based on nanopyramidal gold surface with enhanced electron transfer of myoglobin.
- Author
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Xia P, Liu H, and Tian Y
- Subjects
- Electron Transport, Equipment Design, Equipment Failure Analysis, Hydrogen Peroxide chemistry, Nanoparticles ultrastructure, Nanotechnology instrumentation, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Surface Properties, Biosensing Techniques instrumentation, Electrochemistry instrumentation, Electrodes, Gold chemistry, Hydrogen Peroxide analysis, Myoglobin chemistry, Nanoparticles chemistry
- Abstract
Direct and reversible electron transfer of myoglobin (Mb), for the first time, is achieved at nanopyramidal gold surface, which was fabricated by one-step electrodeposition, with redox formal potential of 0.21+/-0.01 V (vs. Ag/AgCl) and an apparent heterogeneous electron-transfer rate constant (k(s)) of 1.6+/-0.2 s(-1). Electrochemical investigation indicates that Mb is stably confined on the nanopyramidal gold surface and maintains electrocatalytic activity toward hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)). The facilitated electron transfer combined with the intrinsic catalytical activity of Mb substantially construct the third-generation biosensor for H(2)O(2). The positive redox potential of Mb at the nanostructured gold electrode gives a strong basis for determination of H(2)O(2) with high selectivity. Besides this advantage, the present biosensor also exhibits quick response time, broad linear range, and good sensitivity. The dynamic detection linear range is from 1 microM to 1.4 mM with a detection limit of 0.5 microM at 3sigma. The striking analytical performance of the present biosensor, as well as the biocompatibility of gold nanostructures provided a potential for continuous, on-line detection of H(2)O(2) in the biological system.
- Published
- 2009
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