Glassy carbon electrode modified with hybrid nanofibers containing carbon nanotubes trapped in chitosan for the voltammetric sensing of nicotine at biological pH

In this paper, nicotine (NIC) was detected by cyclic voltammetry (CV) using a modified glassy carbon (GC) electrode. To do this, the surface of the GC electrode was modified by hybrid nanofiber obtained from the electrospinning method. Hybrid nanofibers were produced through the dispersion of carbox...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nanotechnology 2020-10, Vol.31 (43), p.435504-435504
Hauptverfasser: Mirani, Abolfazl, Maleknia, Laleh, Amirabadi, Amir
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In this paper, nicotine (NIC) was detected by cyclic voltammetry (CV) using a modified glassy carbon (GC) electrode. To do this, the surface of the GC electrode was modified by hybrid nanofiber obtained from the electrospinning method. Hybrid nanofibers were produced through the dispersion of carboxylated multi-walled carbon nanotube (MWCNT-COOH) as an inorganic component in the chitosan (CS) polymer matrix as an organic component. The nanofibers showed unique morphology and high surface area value. With the increase of functionalized carbon nanotube content in the nanofibers, the mean pore diameter and average nanofiber diameter increased. The electrochemical properties of nanofibers towards the sensing of NIC were investigated by the CV method. NIC was irreversibly reduced with the use of a CS/MWCNT-COOH electrode, a controlled process with two protons and two electrons. An oxidation signal at lower potential with higher current was obtained for NIC with the use of a polymer-modified electrode compared to a GC electrode. This was as a result of the electrocatalytic effect of the hybrid nanofibers due to the ability of carbon nanotubes to increase the rate of electron transfer. Under optimum conditions, the oxidation of NIC occurred at 0.82 eV with a pH of 7.4. The linear calibration curve was in the concentration range of 0.1-100 μM NIC (R2 = 0.9987) with a detection limit of 30 nM. For 100 parallel 10 μM NIC diagnoses for five replicates, 97.2% with a standard deviation of 4.08 maintained their stability over the first cycle. This indicates that the CS/MWCNT-COOH electrode has excellent reproducibility and stability.
ISSN:0957-4484
1361-6528
DOI:10.1088/1361-6528/aba20e