185 resultados para amperometric detection (L)-dopa
Resumo:
Capillary electrophoresis with amperometric detection is evaluated for the simultaneous determination of 2-aminothiazole (A), 2-amino-benzothiazole (AB), 2-mercaptobenzothiazole (AM). The cyclic voltammogram, hydrodynamic voltammogram, effect of pH, concentration of buffer and separation voltage on the separation and the detection were studied. The conditions were optimized as follows: 50 mM phosphate buffet; pH 6.0, 2s at 17.5 kV sample injection, separation at 17.5 kV, 1.2 V as detection potential. The method provided low detection limit as 0.5 mu M, 0.05 mu M and 0.01 mu M, wide linear range 2-200 mu M, 10-200 mu M and 0.025-100 mu M for A, AB, and AM, respectively. The variations in peak current and migration time for 15 consecutive injections of a standard containing 5 mu M each compound were 3.7, 2.1, and 3.9%, and 1.2, 0.8, and 1.2%, for A, AB and AM, respectively. This method was employed to analyze river water.
Resumo:
A capillary electrophoresis-amperometric detection system was developed for the determination of propranolol (PRO) at a 33 mu m carbon fiber microdisk electrode (CFE). The cyclic voltammogram, the hydrodynamic voltammograms and the effect of pH were studied. Under the optimum conditions: separation Voltage 15 kV; injection 3 s at 15 kV; 10 mM pH 7.5 phosphate buffer, 1.15 V (vs. Ag/AgCl) detection potential, the detection limit (LOD) for PRO was 0.05 mu M (S/N = 3). The response for PRO was linear over two orders of magnitude with a linear correlation coefficient of 0.994. The feasibility of this method was demonstrated by the detection of PRO in urine sample.
Resumo:
Sensitive end-column amperometric detection has been successfully coupled to capillary electrophoresis for chiral separation of promethazine, with a carbon fiber microdisk electrode as working electrode. Baseline separation and sensitive detection were achieved under optimum conditions: 0.030 M Na2HPO4 and 0.015 M citric acid at pH = 2.50, 1.0 mM beta -CD, 10 kV separation voltage, and detection potential 1.10 V (vs Ag/AgCl). The numbers of theoretical plates were higher than 700000, and the detection limit was 5 x 10(-8) M. On-line treatment of the electrode has also been studied and discussed.
Resumo:
Determination of aesculin (AL) and aesculetin (AT) by capillary electrophoresis with end-column amperometric detection using a 33 mu m microdisk carbon fiber electrode is described. The HDVs, the effect of pH, buffer concentration, injection voltage, injection time and separation voltage on the peak current response (i(p)) of the analytes and the number of theoretical plates (N) were studied. The method has high sensitivity and good reproducibility. Under the optimum condition - 10 mM, pH 9.00 phosphate buffer, 4 s at 9 kV injection, separation at 15 kV and +1.0 V as the detection potential - low detection limits (S/N = 3) of 0.06 and 0.3 mu M were obtained for AL and AT, respectively. The calibration curve was linear over three orders of magnitude. The relative standard deviations (n = 15) of peak current and migration time were 3.9% and 4.6%, and 0.96% and 0.75% for 15 consecutive injections of 5 mu M AL and AT, respectively. The use of this method for the separation and detection of the two compounds present in the traditional Chinese medicine and human urine samples is also reported. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
A rapid and sensitive detection method for the determination of 5-fluorouracil(5-FU) in real samples such as human urine and bovine serum albumin (BSA) was described. A carbon fiber microdisk electrode was used to perform end-column amperometric detection in capillary zone electrophoresis. The detection limit was as low as 2.5x10(-7) M and the wider linear range for the concentration was between 5x10(-6) and 1x10(-4) M with a correlation coefficient of 0.995.
Resumo:
A poly(4-vinyl)pyridine (PVP)/Pd film electrode was constructed for the electrocatalytic detection of hydrazine. The preparation of the PVP/GC electrode was performed by electropolymerization of the monomer 4-vinylpyridine onto the surface of a glassy carbon electrode. Subsequently, palladium is electrodeposited onto the polymer modified electrode surface. The ion-exchange function of PVP polymer is helpful to this process in view of the tetrachlorapalladate anion. Compared with the Pd/GC electrode, the modified electrode displays a better mechanical stability in a flowing stream. The PVP/Pd film electrode exhibits higher sensitivity when detecting hydrazine with a detection limit of 0.026 ng (S/N=3).
Resumo:
Chromatography-amperometric detection of nitrite with a polypyrrole modified glassy carbon electrode doped with tungstodiphosphate anion (Dawson-type P2W18O626-/PPy/GC electrode) based on its electrocatalytic reduction of nitrite is described. The cyclic and hydrodynamic voltammetry of nitrite at the P2W18O626-/PPy/GC electrode was studied. The factors affecting the detection of nitrite and the analytical performance of the modified electrode in flowing stream were investigated. The results show that the modified electrode has a good sensitivity (the limit of detection is 1 mu mol dm(-3)) and a satisfactory reproducibility (RSD = 3.78%, N = 21). The modified electrode was used in the chromatographic detection of nitrite spiked in the liquid from a tin of mushrooms and the mineralized spring water. It was found that the modified electrode exhibited good selectivity for nitrite.
Resumo:
An acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity detection system was fabricated based on the electrocatalysis of cobalt(II) tetraphenylporphyrin of the electrooxidation of thiocholine chloride, which is the product of the hydrolysis of acetylthiocholine chloride by AChE. A simple modified method was used to form the base electrode. AChE was cross-linked on the base electrode by glutaraldehyde. The optimum working conditions are discussed and the characteristics of the detection system are evaluated.
Resumo:
Capillary electrophoresis (CE)/electrochemical detection (EC) for the simultaneous determination of hydrazine and isoniazid has been developed. The electrochemical method uses a novel modified electrode dispersed with ultrafine platinum particles on the surface of a 30 mu m carbon fiber microelectrode. The unique characteristic of the Pt-particles modified carbon fiber microelectrode is its excellent stability. The current measurement for hydrazine is more sensitive than that of isoniazid. Selective determination of trace amount of free hydrazine in isoniazid and its formulation can be achieved at applied potential of 0.5 V.
Resumo:
A reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic method with amperometric detection is described for the separation and quantification of uric acid, guanine, hypoxanthine and xanthine. The isocratic separation of a standard mixture of the compounds was achieved in 5 min on a Spherisorb 5 C-18 reversed-phase column, with a mobile phase of NaH2PO4 (300 mmol dm(-3) pH 3.0)-methanol-acetonitrile-tetrahydrofuran (97.8 + 0.5 + 1.5 + 0.2). Uric acid, guanine, hypoxanthine and xanthine were completely separated, with detection limits in the range 2-20 pmol per injection. The effect of pH and the composition of the mobile phase on the separation are described. The hydrodynamic voltammograms of these compounds were recorded at a glassy carbon electrode. The linear range of the calibration graph for each compound was: uric acid; 1-5000 mu mol dm(-3); guanine, 0.5-2000 mu mol dm(-3); hypoxanthine, 0.1-500 mu mol dm(-3) and xanthine, 0.5-5000 mu mol dm(-3). The within- and between-day precision was good. The uric acid and hypoxanthine content in human plasma was measured using the proposed method. Good recoveries of uric acid (97.9-103%), hypoxanthine (98.0-99.2%), guanine (96.0-98.3%) and xanthine (96.0-102%) were obtained from human plasma. The results of electrochemical detection were in good agreement with those of UV detection.
Resumo:
A conducting polypyrrole film immobilized with PMo12O403- anion on a glassy carbon electrode was prepared by an electrochemical method. This kind of chemically modified electrode (CME) was prepared successfully by doping the polypyrrole film electrode wit
Resumo:
A new liquid chromatography electrochemical (LCEC) scheme for glucose sensing has been developed on the basis of a Prussian Blue chemically modified electrode (CME) of novel construction and characterized in terms of various experimental parameters by the flow injection analysis (FIA) technique. Unique hydrodynamic voltammograms were obtained for the first time at the CME in the flow-through amperometric detection of glucose, and subsequently both anodic and cathodic peaks could be expected on monitoring the operating potential in the modest positive or negative region. The unique pH dependence on the CME response towards glucose makes it perfectly compatible with conventional reversed phase liquid chromatography systems. On the basis of these features, practical application in glucose LCEC detection has been effectively performed; a linear response range over three orders of magnitude and a detection limit of subpicomole level were readily obtained. The capability of the established LCEC mode in the direct sensing of urinary glucose has been demonstrated.
Resumo:
A copper-based chemically modified electrode (CME) has been constructed and characterized for flow-through amperometric detection of catechol, resorcinol, and hydroquinone. Novel potential dependence of the detector response was first obtained for these analytes at the Cu CME, where negative peaks together with positive ones were observed in one definite chromatogram using amperometric detection. Its advantages in chromatographic applications were demonstrated. From these observations it is proposed that the detector response was governed by formation of copper complexes with the solutes. A dynamic linear range over two orders of magnitude was obtained, when operating the detector at +0.10 V vs. SCE, from which ng detection limits were achieved.
Resumo:
A novel Prussian blue chemically modified electrode (CME) was constructed and characterized for liquid chromatography electrochemical detection (LCEC) of catecholamines. Both anodic and cathodic peaks could be obtained by monitoring at constant applied potential at anodic and slightly cathodic potential ranges (0.3-0.7 and -0.2-0.1 V vs. SCE), respectively. When arranged in a series configuration, using the modified electrodes as generating and collecting detectors, extremely high effective collection efficiencies of 0.91 (for norepinephrine) and 0.58 (for dihydroxyphenylacetic acid) were achieved in dual-electrode LCEC for catecholamines; and a linear response range over 3 orders of magnitude and a detection limit of 10 pg were obtained with a downstream CME as the indicating detector.
Resumo:
A Prussian Blue-modified glassy carbon electrode prepared by simple adsorption exhibited excellent electrocatalytic activity in the oxidation of hydrazine in acidic media. A film of the perfluorosulphonic acid polymer Nafion coated on top of the Prussian Blue-modified glassy carbon electrode can improve the mechanical stability of the Prussian Blue layer in the flow stream. Hydrazine was detected by flow-injection analysis at the modified electrode with high sensitivity. The limit of detection was 0.6 ng.