Issue 11, 2004

An organic-phase optical phenol biosensor coupling enzymatic oxidation with chemical reduction

Abstract

This paper presents a recycle amplification optical biosensor to monitor phenol in hydrophobic organic solvents. Tyrosinase was first immobilised by entrapping it in a copolymer membrane of poly(vinyl alcohol)–hydroxyethyl carboxymethylcellulose doped with octadecylsilica particles. The biosensor was then constructed by co-mixing small particles of the immobilised tyrosinase with the adduct of L-ascorbic acid–poly(vinyl alcohol) (AsA–PVA) in conjunction with an optical oxygen transducer. The biosensor was characterised by its amplifying response to phenol, stable biocatalytic activity of entrapped-tyrosinase, free of interference from o-quinone polymerisation, and large water buffer capacity in hydrophobic organic solvents. The working range of the biosensor to phenol was 0.08–40 mmol dm−3 in the flow mode. The response times (95%) of the biosensor were 4–7 min for phenol. The operational lifetime was more than 40 assays and the shelf lifetime of the biosensor was longer than 3 months. The biosensor has been successfully applied to quantify the phenol contents in some commercial ointment samples.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 May 2004
Accepted
31 Aug 2004
First published
23 Sep 2004

Analyst, 2004,129, 1143-1149

An organic-phase optical phenol biosensor coupling enzymatic oxidation with chemical reduction

X. J. Wu, M. M. F. Choi and X. M. Wu, Analyst, 2004, 129, 1143 DOI: 10.1039/B408035A

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