1. Electrochemical Behavior of Quinones Classically Used for Bioenergetical Applications: Considerations and Insights about the Anodic Side
- Author
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Dr. Guillaume Longatte, Dr. Olivier Buriez, Prof. Eric Labbé, Prof. Manon Guille‐Collignon, and Prof. Frédéric Lemaître
- Subjects
Molecular electrochemistry ,Kinetics ,Thermodynamics ,Biofuel cells ,Quinones ,Industrial electrochemistry ,TP250-261 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract Quinones are electrochemical probes which are used for a large range of applications including bioenergetics. One electrochemical feature of quinones is their possible slow electron transfer kinetics. In this article we compared several quinones towards electron transfer kinetics and the ability of anodic pretreatment to increase electron transfer rate constant. Rotating disk electrode and chronoamperometry measurements were used to revisit their electrochemical behavior. Additionally, the number of electrons exchanged as a function of the characteristic time was used as a proxy to investigate kinetic limitations. A model was suggested to rationalize our results. Beyond a classification of quinones regarding the kinetic and thermodynamic ability of the hydroquinone form to be re‐oxidized, some intrinsic physicochemical properties were identified from our model (such as a time dependency of the exchanged number of electrons) to characterize such important redox mediators.
- Published
- 2024
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