Issue 8, 2012

The electrochemical performance of graphene modified electrodes: An analytical perspective

Abstract

We explore the use of graphene modified electrodes towards the electroanalytical sensing of various analytes, namely dopamine hydrochloride, uric acid, acetaminophen and p-benzoquinone via cyclic voltammetry. In line with literature methodologies and to investigate the full-implications of employing graphene in this electrochemical context, we modify electrode substrates that exhibit either fast or slow electron transfer kinetics (edge- or basal- plane pyrolytic graphite electrodes respectively) with well characterised commercially available graphene that has not been chemically treated, is free from surfactants and as a result of its fabrication has an extremely low oxygen content, allowing the true electroanalytical applicability of graphene to be properly de-convoluted and determined. In comparison to the unmodified underlying electrode substrates (constructed from graphite), we find that graphene exhibits a reduced analytical performance in terms of sensitivity, linearity and observed detection limits towards each of the various analytes studied within. Owing to graphene's structural composition, low proportion of edge plane sites and consequent slow heterogeneous electron transfer rates, there appears to be no advantages, for the analytes studied here, of employing graphene in this electroanalytical context.

Graphical abstract: The electrochemical performance of graphene modified electrodes: An analytical perspective

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Dec 2011
Accepted
17 Feb 2012
First published
09 Mar 2012

Analyst, 2012,137, 1815-1823

The electrochemical performance of graphene modified electrodes: An analytical perspective

D. A. C. Brownson, C. W. Foster and C. E. Banks, Analyst, 2012, 137, 1815 DOI: 10.1039/C2AN16279B

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