Open Access Article
Gastón D.
Pierini
ab,
Christopher W.
Foster
b,
Samuel. J.
Rowley-Neale
b,
Héctor
Fernández
a and
Craig E.
Banks
*b
aDepartamento de Química, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físico-Químicas y Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto, Agencia Postal No 3, 5800 Río Cuarto, Argentina. E-mail: c.banks@mmu.ac.uk; Web: http://www.craigbanksresearch.com Fax: +44 (0)161-247-6831; Tel: +44 (0)161-247-1196
bFaculty of Science and Engineering, Manchester Metropolitan University, Chester Street, Manchester M1 5GD, UK
First published on 18th May 2018
Screen-printed electrodes (SPEs) are ubiquitous with the field of electrochemistry allowing researchers to translate sensors from the laboratory to the field. In this paper, we report an electrochemically driven intercalation process where an electrochemical reaction uses an electrolyte as a conductive medium as well as the intercalation source, which is followed by exfoliation and heating/drying via microwave irradiation, and applied to the working electrode of screen-printed electrodes/sensors (termed EDI-SPEs) for the first time. This novel methodology results in an increase of up to 85% of the sensor area (electrochemically active surface area, as evaluated using an outer-sphere redox probe). Upon further investigation, it is found that an increase in the electroactive area of the EDI-screen-printed based electrochemical sensing platforms is critically dependent upon the analyte and its associated electrochemical mechanism (i.e. adsorption vs. diffusion). Proof-of-concept for the electrochemical sensing of capsaicin, a measure of the hotness of chillies and chilli sauce, within both model aqueous solutions and a real sample (Tabasco sauce) is demonstrated in which the electroanalytical sensitivity (a plot of signal vs. concentration) is doubled when utilising EDI-SPEs over that of SPEs.
An approach used in the academic literature to increase the area of carbon materials involves electrochemical techniques, which offer intercalation with acidic intercalants such as sulphuric, perchloric, nitric and trifluoroacetic acids.13–16 Electrochemical Interaction Reactions (EIRs) are utilised to exfoliate graphite. In these approaches, guest ions (cations, M+ or anions, X−) intercalate under electrochemical perturbation into the Van der Waal's gaps between carbon layers and enlarge the inter-layer distance.17 These EIRs can be summarised as:
In such cases, the Cn needs to be electrochemically active and the host carbon structure should be capable of accepting, not only sterically but also electronically, the guest ions via a suitable energy band structure.17 Interaction reactions identified above are reversible and topotactic.17 Another interesting scenario is the creation of ternary phases, via:
Some examples reported in the academic literature utilising the above approaches include the work of Morales et al.18 who reported the production of few-layer graphene via electrochemically produced graphite intercalation in aqueous perchloric acid solutions and expansion by microwave radiation, which contributes to the removal of the trapped solvent causing further expansion.19 While the approaches above are generally utilised to produce expanded graphite nanoplatelets19 or few-layer graphene,18 Zhang et al.20 have utilised this graphite expansion method to produce a potential anode within a Li-ion battery, where the expansion of the graphitic structure allows for an increased number of reaction sites with the electrolyte, leading to improved energy capabilities.20 The utilisation of the above approaches to screen-printed electrodes has not yet been, to the best of our knowledge, reported which can potentially be utilised to increase the electrochemical active surface area to impart improvements in electroanalytical performance.
Herein, we explore the feasibility of an anodically driven electrochemically intercalation process, where an electrochemical reaction uses an electrolyte as a conductive medium and as an intercalation source, which is followed by exfoliation and heating/drying via microwave irradiation, applied to the working electrode of screen-printed electrodes/sensors (EDI-SPEs) for the first time. In this approach, perchloric and formic acids are utilised as both the electrolyte and the intercalation compounds and the EDI-SPEs are evaluated towards redox probes and commonly benchmarked analytically useful analytes: sodium nitrite, dopamine, uric acid and capsaicin.
:
40) reference electrode was applied by screen-printing Ag/AgCl paste (Product Code: C2040308P3; Gwent Electronic Materials Ltd, UK) onto the plastic substrate. This layer was once more cured in an oven at 60 °C for 30 min. Finally, an insulating dielectric paste ink (Product Code: D2070423D5; Gwent Electronic Materials Ltd, UK) was printed to cover the connections and define the 3 mm diameter graphite working electrode. After curing at 60 °C for 30 min the screen-printed electrodes are ready to use and have been thoroughly benchmarked previously.22,23
The procedure for the expansion of the electrochemical active area consists of two facile steps: Step 1, electrochemical intercalation step:
Step 2, expansion step: where the electrochemically driven intercalation compounds are removed via heating, in this case, microwave irradiation (Argos Stores, UK Simple Value, UK, Model: MM7 17CNF (F)-PM), which will also remove the trapped species, but assist with further expansion of the graphite. In this work, we also considered heating via a fan oven (see later).
Electrochemical characterisation (see the ESI†) of the electrodes utilised throughout this work was via the effective electroactive area (Aeff)/electrode area. To evaluate this parameter (Aeff) we utilised the redox probe 1 mM hexaammineruthenium(III) chloride in 0.1 M KCl, and the Randles–Ševčík equation (at 298 K):26IpQuasi = 2.65 × 105n3/2D1/2v1/2CAeff where n is the number of electrons involved in the electrochemical process, D is the diffusion coefficient (9.1 × 10−6 cm2 s−1) of the electrochemical redox probe used,27ν is the applied voltammetric scan rate, C is the concentration of the electroactive substance, and Aeff is the effective electrode area.
To fully understand and benchmark these sensing platforms an array of scan rates was utilised (0.05 to 0.5 V s−1) to estimate Aeff. To determine if the expansion causes an improvement in the surface's electron transfer behaviour, we evaluated the effect of the standard heterogeneous rate constant (k0), using the Nicholson method:23,28k0 = [2.18(DαnFv/RT)0.5]exp[−(α2nF/RT)×ΔEp], where the constants are the same as described previously, apart from the transfer coefficient α, which is assumed to correspond to 0.5, F is the Faraday constant, R the universal gas constant, and the experiments are performed at a temperature T. ΔEp is peak-to-peak separation.
In the case of the determination of capsaicin in hot chilli sauce, ∼2 g of Tabasco hot sauce was accurately weighed in a small conical flask and diluted with methanol (typically mL). The samples were ultra-sonicated for 20 minutes in order to extract the capsaicin, via liquid–liquid extraction from the chilli sauce. After this step, the samples were centrifuged for 10 min. The real sample was then filtered via gravitation into a 20 mL volumetric flask and diluted with methanol. Finally, 1.0 mL of the final solution was placed within an electrochemical cell and diluted further with 9 mL of 0.1 M H3PO4, which acts as the supporting electrolyte.
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| Fig. 1 Schematic overview of the modification protocol of the microwave assisted electrochemically driven intercalated screen-printed electrodes (EDI-SPEs). | ||
First, as depicted in Fig. 2 and Table 1, the electroanalytical performance of the EDI-SPEs is benchmarked towards sodium nitrite, dopamine, uric acid and capsaicin. In all cases, utilising the unmodified and EDI-SPE electrochemical analysis over the concentration range is linear, however it is apparent that the EDI-SPE does not significantly improve the sensitivity of the EDI-SPEs/sensor towards the detection of dopamine, sodium nitrite and uric acid. Nonetheless, there are slight analytical improvements (when utilising the EDI-SPEs) within the limits of detection (LOD, 3σ) of each analyte (sodium nitrite, dopamine and uric acid), but the response is hindered due to the increased capacitive current. The electrochemical detection of capsaicin (presented in Fig. 2G and H) reveals that the EDI-SPEs result in an improved sensitivity (0.126 and 0.239 μA μM−1 for the SPEs and the EDI-SPE respectively) and LOD (1.76 and 0.36 μM for the SPEs and the EDI-SPE respectively) when utilising the EDI-SPEs over that of SPEs.
| Analyte | Methodology | Sensitivity (μA μM−1) | LOD (μM) | Linear range (μM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nitrite | SPEs | 0.024 | 1.66 | 10–100 |
| EDI-SPEs | 0.038 | 6.32 | 10–100 | |
| Dopamine | SPEs | 0.032 | 0.92 | 5–100 |
| EDI-SPEs | 0.031 | 4.91 | 5–100 | |
| Uric acid | SPEs | 0.024 | 1.70 | 5–100 |
| EDI-SPEs | 0.020 | 2.47 | 5–100 | |
| Capsaicin | SPEs | 0.111 | 4.76 | 5–100 |
| EDI-SPEs | 0.209 | 2.77 | 5–100 |
Thus, we can conclude that this modification technique/process does not improve the electroanalytical performance of analytes that undergo diffusional or mixed diffusional-adsorptive reaction mechanisms using the EDI-SPEs. However, it is clear that analytes that require a strong adsorptive mechanism, as is the case with capsaicin, demonstrate an improved electroanalytical performance when utilising EDI-SPEs. The observed electrochemical behaviour agrees with independent work by Compton et al.29 who demonstrate that the electrochemical mechanism of capsaicin is via an adsorption mechanism (rather than diffusion). Hence, they utilise this adsorption (via adsorption stripping voltammetry) using multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) modified electrodes where the adsorption is favoured strongly by pi–pi interactions between the aromatic moieties in capsaicin and the surface of the carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Thus in our work, the exfoliation increases the surface area of the basal sheets of graphite providing more aromatic surfaces for capsaicin to adsorb onto; hence the observed increase in the sensitivity (∼×2).29
Next, we consider the applicability of the EDI-SPEs towards the detection of capsaicin within a real sample, Tabasco sauce. Fig. 3 demonstrates linear sweep voltammograms directly from five spiked Tabasco sauce samples. However, the content of capsaicin in the real sample was found to be under the detection limit of this analytical procedure, therefore recovery assays were employed in order to validate the methodology, with an average recovery of 95% utilising the EDI-SPEs (see Table 2); in summary we can conclude that the EDI-SPEs are useful for the electroanalytical determination of capsaicin within real chilli sauce.
| Samples | Added/μM | Recovery/μM | Recovery/% | Relative error/% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | 10 | 9.41 | 94.1 | −5.9 |
| S2 | 20 | 18.64 | 93.2 | −6.8 |
| S3 | 30 | 30.35 | 101.2 | +1.2 |
| S4 | 40 | 40.06 | 100.1 | +0.1 |
| S5 | 50 | 45.55 | 91.1 | −8.9 |
| Recovery analysis | ||||
| Mean recovery (Rexp) | 95.94 | |||
| Standard deviation of recoveries (SR) | 4.45 | |||
| Number of samples (N) | 5 | |||
| t exp | 2.0 | |||
| t (0.025, 4) | 2.8 | |||
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c7an01982c |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018 |