Al-Based porous coordination polymer derived nanoporous carbon for immobilization of glucose oxidase and its application in glucose/O2 biofuel cell and biosensor

Herein, we report the first example of using the Al-based porous coordination polymers (Al-PCP) as a template for preparation of nanoporous carbon through a two-step carbonized method. By applying the appropriate carbonized temperature in the first-step carbonization process, both high surface area...

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Veröffentlicht in:RSC advances 2017-02, Vol.7 (20), p.11872-11879
Hauptverfasser: Kang, Zepeng, Jiao, Kailong, Peng, Ruiyun, Hu, Zongqian, Jiao, Shuqiang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Herein, we report the first example of using the Al-based porous coordination polymers (Al-PCP) as a template for preparation of nanoporous carbon through a two-step carbonized method. By applying the appropriate carbonized temperature in the first-step carbonization process, both high surface area and large pore volume are realized in the second-step carbonization process even at a high-temperature. The SEM images show that the carbonized Al-PCP before and after HF treatment (PCP) retained mostly crystallite shapes and sponge-like surface morphology. The TEM images of carbonized Al-PCP and PCP clearly exhibited high porosity with a wide range of pore sizes spanning from micro- to macropores. The maximum BET surface area and pore volume were 2773.5 m2 g-1 and 1.885 cm3 g-1, respectively. The obtained highly nanoporous carbon PCPs were used to modify a glassy carbon electrode (GCE) based on glucose oxidase (GOx), resulting in efficient direct electron transfer and excellent bio-catalytic performance. In addition, a glucose/O2 fuel cell constructed using Nafion/GOx/PCP/GCE as the anode and an E-TEK Pt/C modified GCE as the cathode generated a maximum power density of 0.548 mW cm-2 at 0.41 V. The findings in this work may be helpful for exploiting novel nanoporous carbons derived from metal-organic framework (MOF) by using a two-step carbonization method for the immobilization of enzymes in enzymatic biofuel cells or biosensors.
ISSN:2046-2069
DOI:10.1039/c7ra00852j