This paper describes a diffusion-controlled electrolysis of glucose with mediated bioelectrocatalysis at microdisk-electrodes. Under conditions of an extremely fast enzyme reaction, compared with the diffusion of glucose, the current in potential-step chronoamperometry reaches an almost steady state within 10 s, and is proportional to the glucose concentration. The current can be detected at +0.1 V (vs. Ag|AgCl) with 9,10-phenanthrenequinone as a mediator. The addition of carboxymethylcellulose increased the linear range up to 10 mM.
The pseudo-steady-state current due to a mediated enzymatic reaction on a microelectrode is characterized on the basis of theoretical analysis and numerical simulation. The steady-state current is proportional to substrate concentration when the enzymatic reaction is considerably faster than substrate mass transport via nonlinear diffusion. Under such conditions, the reaction plane, where the mass flow of the substrate is converted to that of the mediator, exists near the electrode surface. The steady-state current increases as the diffusion coefficient of the substrate increases. In contrast, the diffusion coefficient and the concentration of the mediator have minor effects on the current. This difference can be explained on the basis of a change in the reaction plane location. When a sufficient amount of enzyme exists in a system, the system can be used as an amperometric biosensor, the response of which is independent of any change in enzyme activity.
The fabrication of ultrathin-ring electrodes with a diameter of 2 mm and a thickness of 100 nm is established. The ultrathin-ring electrodes provide a large density of pseudo-steady-state currents, and realize pseudo-steady-state amperometry under quiescent conditions without a Faraday cage. Under the limiting current conditions, the current response at the ultrathin-ring electrode can be well explained by the theory of the microband electrode response. Cyclic voltammograms at the ultrathin-ring electrode show sigmoidal characteristics with some hysteresis. Numerical simulation reveals that the hysteresis can be ascribed to the time-dependence of pseudo-steady-state current. The performance of amperometry with the ultrathin-ring electrode has been verified in its application to redox enzyme kinetic measurements.
Highly reproducible bioelectrocatalytic endpoint assays are described. The method is based on a complete redox conversion of a substrate to a redox mediator with a corresponding redox enzyme and an amperometric detection of the reduced mediator on a diffusionally independent microelectrode array. The current reaches a steady state within a few seconds and is proportional to the number of the integrated microelectrodes. The method has successfully been applied to histamine detection at micro-molar level and glucose detection at milli-molar level.
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