Background
Type: Article

Layer by layer assembly of glucose oxidase and thiourea onto glassy carbon electrode: Fabrication of glucose biosensor

Journal: Electrochimica Acta (00134686)Year: 1 July 2011Volume: 56Issue: Pages: 6097 - 6105
Salimi A.Nurbakhsh S.a
DOI:10.1016/j.electacta.2011.04.073Language: English

Abstract

For the first time a novel, simple and facile approach is described to construct highly stable glucose oxidase (GOx) multilayer onto glassy carbon (GC) electrode using thiourea (TU) as a covalent attachment cross-linker. The layer by layer (LBL) attachment process was confirmed by cyclic voltammetry, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and Fourier transform infrared reflection spectroscopy (FT-IR-RS) techniques. Immobilized GOx shows excellent electrocatalytic activity toward glucose oxidation using ferrocenemethanol as artificial electron transfer mediator and biosensor response was directly correlated to the number of bilayers. The surface coverage of active GOx per bilayer, heterogeneous electron transfer rate constant (ks) and Michaelis-Menten constant (KM), of immobilized GOx were 1.50 × 10-12 mol cm-2, 9.2 ± 0.5 s-1 and 3.42(±0.2) mM, respectively. The biosensor constructed with four-bilayers of TU/GOx showed good stability, high reproducibility, long life-time, fast amperometric response (5 s) with the high sensitivity of 5.73 μA mM -1 cm-2 and low detection limit of 6 μM at concentration range up to 5.5 mM. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All Rights Reserved.


Author Keywords

BiosensorCovalent attachmentFerrocenemethanolGlucose oxidaseLayer by layerThiourea

Other Keywords

Cyclic voltammetryElectrochemical corrosionElectrochemical impedance spectroscopyElectron transitionsFourier transformsGlass membrane electrodesGlassy carbonGlucoseGlucose sensorsRate constantsThioureasUreaAmperometric responseAttachment processBi-layerBiosensor responseConcentration rangesCovalent attachmentCrosslinkerElectrocatalytic activityElectron transfer mediatorsFerrocenemethanolFourier transform infraredGlassy carbon electrodesGlucose biosensorGlucose oxidationGood stabilityHeterogeneous electron transfer rate constantHigh reproducibilityHigh sensitivityLayer by layerLayer-by-layer assembliesLife-timesLow detection limitMichaelis-Menten constantSurface coveragesGlucose oxidase