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Preparation, Characterization, and Activation of Natural Glassy Carbon Paste Electrodes as New Sensors for Determining the Total Antioxidant Capacity of Plant Extracts.

Agnieszka KrólickaAnna SzczurkowskaPawel MochalskiGrzegorz Malata
Published in: Membranes (2022)
The continuous search for new sensing materials with high recognition capabilities is necessary to improve existing analytical procedures and to develop new ones. Natural glassy carbon and polydimethylsiloxane were shown to be used for the preparation of carbon paste electrodes to employ them in new, voltammetric, green-chemistry-friendly electroanalytical procedures aimed at evaluating the antioxidant capacity of plant extracts, dietary supplements, and hydrolats. The developed electrodes provided well-shaped and reproducible voltammetric signals (RSD = 1%) of the oxidation of epigallocatechin gallate, the main component of many plants and plant-based formulations with antioxidative activity, in the 1-12.5 µM range (DPV mode, LOD = 0.08 µM). If needed, the performance of new carbon paste electrodes can be further enhanced by the introduction of trivalent rare earth oxides to carbon paste to increase its active surface, facilitate electron transfer, and improve the resolution of recorded signals.
Keyphrases
  • molecularly imprinted
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • electron transfer
  • carbon nanotubes
  • gold nanoparticles
  • mass spectrometry
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • low cost