Anodic voltammetry of colchicine
Abstract
The anti-inflammatory alkaloid has been examined by anodic rotating disc voltammetry at platinum and gold electrodes. It is oxidised by two two-electron steps and, while the adherence to the Levich square-root-of-frequency relation is approximate, the limiting current is linearly proportional to concentration with zero intercepts, affording excellent rapid voltammetric determination in 0.1 mol lā1 sulphuric acid. Cyclic voltammetry gives no additional information. Mass-and charge-transfer parameters have been determined. Aqueous acidic solutions in the absence of oxygen are unstable, and slowly decompose, probably by hydrolysis of the acetamido group, generating a new anodic wave.