Cyclic voltammetry of GOX

  • Thread starter Thread starter sting10
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Cyclic
AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a research project involving the cross-linking of glucose oxidase (GOX) to a polypyrrole surface on a gold electrode, with cyclic voltammetry experiments conducted to analyze the current output in response to varying glucose concentrations. The key observation is that lower glucose concentrations yield higher peak currents than higher concentrations, which contradicts expectations that increased glucose would enhance ferricyanide reduction and thus increase oxidation current. Participants speculate that kinetic factors may be influencing these results, and there is a focus on understanding the underlying chemistry of the system, particularly the redox reactions involving ferricyanide and the potential formation of byproducts like hydrogen peroxide. The conversation also touches on the necessity of oxygen for producing hydrogen peroxide and confirms the accuracy of the proposed chemical reactions involved in the process.
sting10
Messages
12
Reaction score
0
Hey, this is not a homework question really but more a research issue my fellow students and I have run into.

So basically, we have a project where we have cross-linked glucose oxidase to a polypyrrole surface on a gold electrode. The solution additionally contain PBS as well as ferricyanide as a mediator. The electrode with polypyrrole and GOX is the working electrode.

We run several laps of cyclic voltammetry and at cycle 16, we add glucose. We run several of these experiments at several concentration. three cycles have been handpicked, with 30mM and 40mM glucose have been added for your viewing.

Now we analyse how the current output at 0.6V(forward scan) depends upon glucose addition when we add it at the beginning of cycle 16 (-0.1V forwards scan), which is the third image. (scan rate is 150mV/s)

The last image illustrates the peak current when we add glucose compared to right before.

The problem we are facing is that lower concentrations of glucose added results in a higher output peak relative to higher concentration. This seems pretty counter-intuitive since we would think that a higher conc. of ferricyanide would get reduced at higher conc. of glucose which would lead to a greater oxidation current. We are thinking that there is something kinetics based that we are overlooking.

Hopefully, you have some ideas.
 

Attachments

  • sample2130mM.jpg
    sample2130mM.jpg
    22.5 KB · Views: 581
  • sample2140mM.jpg
    sample2140mM.jpg
    21.1 KB · Views: 555
  • sample21.jpg
    sample21.jpg
    23.7 KB · Views: 520
  • sample21top.jpg
    sample21top.jpg
    18.5 KB · Views: 479
Chemistry news on Phys.org
Looks interesting, can't say I understand what is happening in the solution (I mean - what is the chemistry behind the system and the electrode reaction). Care to elaborate?

I must admit I have not dealt with these things for almost 30 years.
 
Well, hopefully we should have glucose oxidase getting reduced (glucose oxidised). The point of the voltammetry is switching between ferri/ferrocyanide redox couples. Ferricyanide should hopefully work as a mediator (getting reduced to ferrocyanide) transport electrons to electrode and get oxidized to ferricyanide once again. The point was introducing a disturbance into this redox couple when adding glucose and see how this would work out. In our understanding, the dependence should be the exact opposite of what we see. We understand that when we do a forward sweep we are oxidizing any possible species at the working electrode, and when we do the negative sweep we should be reducing species.

We are also wondering what the nature of the current developing at around 0.350 V (backwards sweep). Something is getting reduced, which in our opinion can only be ferricyanide or maybe H2O2 (byproduct when breaking down glucose)
 
So the basic chemistry is

glucose + ferricyanide -> D-glucono-1,5-lactone + ferrocyanide + H2O2

and electrode reaction

ferrocyanide -> ferricyanide

Or am I still missing something?

Don't you need oxygen to produce H2O2?
 
yes, you need oxygen but that should not be a problem according to articles. The reactions you listed are correct.
 
It seems like a simple enough question: what is the solubility of epsom salt in water at 20°C? A graph or table showing how it varies with temperature would be a bonus. But upon searching the internet I have been unable to determine this with confidence. Wikipedia gives the value of 113g/100ml. But other sources disagree and I can't find a definitive source for the information. I even asked chatgpt but it couldn't be sure either. I thought, naively, that this would be easy to look up without...
I was introduced to the Octet Rule recently and make me wonder, why does 8 valence electrons or a full p orbital always make an element inert? What is so special with a full p orbital? Like take Calcium for an example, its outer orbital is filled but its only the s orbital thats filled so its still reactive not so much as the Alkaline metals but still pretty reactive. Can someone explain it to me? Thanks!!
Back
Top