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Voltammetric Antioxidant Analysis in Mineral Oil Samples Immobilized into Boron-Doped Diamond Micropore Array Electrodes

Authors :
Steven D. Bull
Nadeem Rizvi
Yohan Chan
Philip C. Bulman-Page
Xiaohang Zhang
Paul S. Fordred
Christopher A. Paddon
Frank Marken
Ho-Chol Chang
Source :
Electroanalysis. 21:1341-1347
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Wiley, 2009.

Abstract

Mineral oil microdroplets containing the model antioxidant N,N-didodecyl-N′,N′-diethyl-phenylene-diamine (DDPD) are immobilized into a 100×100 pore-array (ca. 10 μm individual pore diameter, 100 μm pitch) in a boron-doped diamond electrode surface. The robust diamond surface allows pore filling, cleaning, and reuse without damage to the electrode surface. The electrode is immersed into aqueous electrolyte media, and voltammetric responses for the oxidation of DDPD are obtained. In order to further improve the current responses, 20 wt% of carbon nanofibers are co-deposited with the oil into the pore array. Voltammetric signals are consistent with the oxidation of DDPD and the associated transfer of perchlorate anions (in aqueous 0.1 M NaClO4) or the transfer of protons (in aqueous 0.1 M HClO4). From the magnitude of the current response, the DDPD content in the mineral oil can be determined down to less than 1 wt% levels. Perhaps surprisingly, the reversible (or midpoint) potential for the DDPD oxidation in mineral oil (when immersed in 0.1 NaClO4) is shown to be concentration-dependent and to shift to more positive potential values for more dilute DDPD in mineral oil solutions. An extraction mechanism and the formation of a separate organic product phase are proposed to explain this behavior.

Details

ISSN :
15214109 and 10400397
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Electroanalysis
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2fd02cc970c3b2b4a7af5d130d6c0257
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/elan.200904590