Glassy Carbon Modified with Cationic Surfactant (GCE/CTAB) as Electrode Material for Fast and Simple Analysis of the Arsenic Drug Roxarsone.
Katarzyna Tyszczuk-RotkoDamian GorylewskiPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
For the fast and simple sensing of the arsenic drug roxarsone (ROX), the development of a glassy carbon electrode (GCE) modified with cationic surfactant (cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, CTAB) material is critical. The CTAB-modified glassy carbon electrode, in contrast to the unmodified one, showed excellent behavior for electrochemical reduction of ROX using cyclic voltammetry (CV) and square-wave adsorptive stripping voltammetry (SWAdSV) techniques. CV studies reveal an irreversible reduction process of NO 2 to NH-OH in the ROX molecule in NaAc-HAc buffer (pH = 5.6). The electrode material was characterized using CV and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. The experiments show that the surfactant-modified material has faster electron transfer and a higher active surface area, and permits a diffusion-adsorption-controlled process. After optimization, the SWAdSV procedure with GCE/CTAB has linear ranges of 0.001-0.02 and 0.02-20 µM, and a detection limit of 0.13 nM. Furthermore, the procedure successfully determined roxarsone in river water samples.
Keyphrases
- electron transfer
- carbon nanotubes
- solid state
- gold nanoparticles
- label free
- drinking water
- minimally invasive
- heavy metals
- ionic liquid
- molecularly imprinted
- high resolution
- gene expression
- mass spectrometry
- single cell
- single molecule
- room temperature
- photodynamic therapy
- aqueous solution
- dna methylation
- quantum dots