Staff publications - Cranfield University at Silsoe
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Browsing Staff publications - Cranfield University at Silsoe by Subject "Calixarene"
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Item Open Access The electrochemistry of the ferri/ferrocyanide couple at a calix [4]resorcinarenetetrathiol-modified gold electrode as a study of novel electrode modifying coatings for use within electro-analytical sensors(Elsevier Science B.V., Amsterdam., 2003-06-05T00:00:00Z) Collyer, Stuart D.; Davis, Frank; Lucke, Andrew; Stirling, Charles J. M.; Higson, Seamus P. J.The electrochemistry of the ferri/ferrocyanide redox couple has been studied at Au electrodes modified with calix[4]resorcinarenetetrathiol. Cyclic voltammetry in Fe(CN)63- solutions yields three separate pairs of faradaic peaks. Evidence is given for these redox couples corresponding to the reduction of Fe(CN)63- and the subsequent re-oxidation of Fe(CN)64- in three differing steric arrangements. One pair of peaks suggest that when the Fe(CN)63- ion resides within the calix [4]resorcinarene bowl, electron transport is facilitated by the calix [4]resorcinarene acting as a charge transfer mediator; in this arrangement the activation energy is found to be lowered by ~24kJmol-1. Another pair of peaks is thought to correspond to the reduction of Fe(CN)63- as it approaches the Au electrode by packing itself in-between adjacent calix[4]resorcinarene molecules. The third pair of redox peaks is attributed to the reduction and subsequent re- oxidation of Fe(CN)63-/Fe(CN)64- when the ion resides above a saturated calix [4]resorcinarene coating; in this case the activation energy was raised by ~45kJmol-1. FTIR spectroscopy of calix[4]resorcinarene-coated Au electrodes and calix[4]resorcinarene-coated Au electrodes exposed to Fe(CN)63- lends further support to this argument, by demonstrating that the Fe(CN)63- ion resides within at least two and possibly three differing environments. Calix[4]resorcinarene modified electrodes previously exposed to ferricyanide lose the calix [4]resorcinarene coating together with a surface layer of gold when subsequently scanned in a phosphate buffer. It therefore appears that the calix [4]resorcinarene/Fe(CN)63- association is stronger than the Au binding to the underlying glass material.