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Title Direct electrochemistry and bioelectrocatalysis of a class II non-symbiotic plant haemoglobin immobilised on screen-printed carbon electrodes
Type JournalPaper
Keywords Screen-printed carbon electrodes . Non-symbiotic plant haemoglobin . Carbon nanotube . Direct electron transfer. Hydrogen peroxide
Abstract In this study, direct electron transfer (ET) has been achieved between an immobilised non-symbiotic plant haemoglobin class II from Beta vulgaris (nsBvHb2) and three different screen-printed carbon electrodes based on graphite (SPCE), multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT-SPCE), and single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNT-SPCE) without the aid of any electron mediator. The nsBvHb2 modified electrodes were studied with cyclic voltammetry (CV) and also when placed in a wall-jet flow through cell for their electrocatalytic properties for reduction of H2O2. The immobilised nsBvHb2 displayed a couple of stable and well-defined redox peaks with a formal potential (E°′) of −33.5 mV (vs. Ag|AgCl|3 M KCl) at pH 7.4. The ET rate constant of nsBvHb2, ks, was also determined at the surface of the three types of electrodes in phosphate buffer solution pH 7.4, and was found to be 0.50 s−1 on SPCE, 2.78 s−1 on MWCNT-SPCE and 4.06 s−1 on SWCNT-SPCE, respectively. The average surface coverage of electrochemically active nsBvHb2 immobilised on the SPCEs, MWCNT-SPCEs and SWCNT-SPCEs obtained was 2.85×10−10 mol cm−2 , 4.13×10−10 mol cm−2 and 5.20×10−10 mol cm−2 . During the experiments the immobilised nsBvHb2 was stable and kept its electrochemical and catalytic activities. The nsBvHb2 modified electrodes also displayed an excellent response to the reduction of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) with a linear detection range from 1 μM to 1000 μM on the surface of SPCEs, from 0.5 μM to 1000 μM on MWCNT-SPCEs, and from 0.1 μM to 1000 μM on SWCNT-SPCEs. The lower limit of detection was 0.8 μM, 0.4 μM and 0.1 μM at 3σ at the SPCEs, the MWCNT-SPCEs, and the SWCNT-SPCEs, respectively, and the apparent Michaelis– Menten constant, Kapp M , for the H2O2 sensors was estimated to be 0.32 mM , 0.29 mM and 0.27 mM, respectively.
Researchers Leif Bülow (Fifth Researcher), Lo Gorton (Fourth Researcher), Jahan Bakhsh Raoof (Third Researcher), Nélida Leiva (Second Researcher), Fereshteh Chekin (First Researcher)