Issue 4, 2009

The preferential electrocatalytic behaviour of graphite and multiwalled carbon nanotubes on enediol groups and their analytical implications in real domains

Abstract

Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) possess preferential ‘electrocatalytic’ properties that affect the oxidation of enediol groups, establishing a relationship between electrocatalysis and chemical structure. Since this chemical structure occurs in analytes involved in high impact areas such as the pharmaceutical, cosmetic, and food safety industries, this preferential electrochemical behaviour was demonstrated using both standard and selected real-world samples. The oxygen-containing species present on the surface of CNTs and generated during acid treatment were responsible for an enhanced electron transfer reaction for these structures using a proton-assisted electron transfer mechanism, thus confirming their crucial role during the surface preparation process of electrocatalysis. The analytical benefits were that the inherent selectivity and sensitivity from these nanomaterials could be exploited for the direct detection of analytes in complex matrices, revealing their crucial role in the simplification of analytical processes.

Graphical abstract: The preferential electrocatalytic behaviour of graphite and multiwalled carbon nanotubes on enediol groups and their analytical implications in real domains

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Dec 2008
Accepted
10 Feb 2009
First published
03 Mar 2009

Analyst, 2009,134, 657-662

The preferential electrocatalytic behaviour of graphite and multiwalled carbon nanotubes on enediol groups and their analytical implications in real domains

A. G. Crevillen, M. Pumera, M. C. Gonzalez and A. Escarpa, Analyst, 2009, 134, 657 DOI: 10.1039/B822334C

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