DocumentCode :
656893
Title :
The effect of Vitamin C for point-of-care blood analysis applications using an electrochemical biosensor
Author :
Ben-Yoav, H. ; Chocron, S.E. ; Winkler, T.E. ; Eunkyoung Kim ; Payne, G.F. ; Ghodssi, Reza ; Kelly, D.L.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
fYear :
2013
fDate :
3-6 Nov. 2013
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
4
Abstract :
This paper reports on an experimental study of the ability to use ascorbic acid as a reducing agent for a clozapine (CLZ) biosensor based on redox cycling electrochemistry. Ascorbic acid, which is naturally present in the blood serum, was related to the current reducing mediator, hexaammineruthenium(III) (Ru). The performance of these two candidate compounds was compared using cyclic voltammetry in the range of -0.4 to 0.7 V at scan rates of 10 mV/s. Results from bare gold electrodes indicate an electrochemical interference on the CLZ signal in the presence of ascorbic acid but no interference in the presence of Ru. Ascorbic acid was further integrated in an electrochemical biosensor comprised of gold electrodes modified with electrodeposited chitosan hydrogel and grafted catechol moieties. This modification improves CLZ sensing by amplifying its electrochemical signal by a factor of nine, compared to bare electrodes. When measured with the modified electrodes, neither ascorbic acid nor Ru affect the performance of the CLZ biosensor. Ru demonstrated a 1.5 times higher amplification of the CLZ peak current signal compared to that of ascorbic acid.
Keywords :
biochemistry; biomedical electrodes; biosensors; blood; electrochemical electrodes; electrochemical sensors; electrodeposition; hydrogels; molecular biophysics; oxidation; polymer blends; proteins; reduction (chemical); ruthenium compounds; voltammetry (chemical analysis); CLZ peak current signal; Vitamin C effect; amplification; ascorbic acid; bare gold electrodes; blood serum; clozapine biosensor; current reducing mediator; cyclic voltammetry; electrochemical biosensor; electrochemical interference; electrochemical signal; electrodeposited chitosan hydrogel; grafted catechol moieties; hexaammineruthenium(III); point-of-care blood analysis applications; redox cycling electrochemistry; reducing agent; voltage -0.4 V to 0.7 V; Biosensors; Electric potential; Electrodes; Films; Interference; Oxidation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
SENSORS, 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD
ISSN :
1930-0395
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICSENS.2013.6688158
Filename :
6688158
Link To Document :
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