Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1174671 Analytical Biochemistry 2008 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

A carbon paste electrode modified with multiwall carbon nanotubes and copper(I) oxide (MWCNT–Cu2O CPME) was fabricated, and the electrochemical behaviors of 19 kinds of natural amino acids at this modified electrode were studied. The experimental results showed that the various kinds of amino acids without any derivatization displayed obvious oxidation current responses at the modified electrode. It was also found that the current response values of amino acids were dependent mainly on pH values of buffer solutions. The phenomenon could be explained by the fact that the amino acids suffered complexation or electrocatalytic oxidation processes under different pH values. Six kinds of amino acids (arginine, tryptophan, histidine, threonine, serine, and tyrosine), which performed high-oxidation current responses in alkaline buffers, were selected to be detected simultaneously by capillary zone electrophoresis coupled with amperometric detection (CZE–AD). These amino acids could be perfectly separated within 20 min, and their detection limits were as low as 10−7 or 10−8 mol L−1 magnitude (signal/noise ratio = 3). The above results demonstrated that MWCNT–Cu2O CPME could be successfully employed as an electrochemical sensor for amino acids with some advantages of convenient preparation, high sensitivity, and good repeatability.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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