AI Article Synopsis

  • The research focuses on developing stable and efficient Solid-Contact Ion-Selective Electrodes (SC-ISEs) using noble metal nanostructures to detect lithium, crucial for monitoring bipolar disorder treatments and addressing environmental concerns from lithium-ion batteries.
  • The study highlights the advantages of using gold nanocorals and platinum nanoflowers for ion-to-electron transduction, noting improvements in sensor performance compared to existing conductive polymer and carbon nanotube designs.
  • Findings indicate that these nanostructured electrodes significantly enhance the capacitance and reduce resistance, while demonstrating quick response times and consistent performance in measuring lithium ion activity.

Article Abstract

Nowadays the development of stable and highly efficient Solid-Contact Ion-Selective Electrodes (SC-ISEs) attracts much attention in the research community because of the great expansion of portable analytical devices. In this work, we present highly stable Li all-solid-state ISEs exploiting noble metals nanostructures as ion-to-electron transducers. The detection of lithium is essential for therapeutic drug monitoring of bipolar patients. In addition, greater environmental exposure to this ion is occurring due to the large diffusion of lithium-ion batteries. However, only a limited number of SC Li ISEs already exists in literature based on Conductive Polymers (CPs) and carbon nanotubes. The use of noble metals for ion-to-electron transduction offers considerable advantages over CPs and carbon materials, including fast and conformal one-step deposition by electrochemical means, non-toxicity and high stability. We investigate for the first time the use of gold nanocorals obtained by means of a one-step electrodeposition process to improve sensor performance and we compare it to all-solid-state ISEs based on electrodeposited platinum nanoflowers. In addition, the effect of substrate electrode material, membrane thickness and conditioning concentration on the potentiometric response is carefully analysed. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Current Reversal Chronopotentiometry (CRC) techniques are used to characterize the morphology and the electrochemical behaviour of the different ISEs. The use of nanostructured gold and platinum contacts allows the increase of the SC capacitance by one or two orders of magnitude, respectively, with respect to the flat metal, while the SC resistance is significantly reduced. We show that the microfabricated sensors offer Nernstian behaviour (58.7±0.8 mV/decade) in the activity range from 10 to 0.1 M, with short response time (∼15 s) and small potential drift during CRC measurements (dEdt=3×10±2×10 V/s). The exceptional response stability is verified also when no potential is applied. The sensor shows high selectivity towards all clinically important ions, with values very similar to conventional ISEs. Furthermore, to our knowledge, the selectivity towards Ca is the best ever reported for SC-ISEs. In conclusion, the present study opens up new interesting perspectives towards the development of simple and reproducible fabrication protocols to obtain high-quality and high-stability all-solid-state ISEs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aca.2018.04.062DOI Listing

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