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Current
Analytical Chemistry
ISSN: 1573-4110

Current Analytical Chemistry
Volume 4, Number 3, July 2008
Contents
Electrochemical Stripping Analysis
Guest Editor: Anastasios Economou

Editorial Pp. 168-169
Stripping Analysis using Boron-Doped Diamond Electrodes
Pp. 170-176
Sarah E. Ward Jones and Richard
G. Compton
[Abstract]
Fabrication and Applications of Nanoparticle-Modified
Electrodes in Stripping Analysis Pp. 177-182
Sarah E. Ward Jones and Richard G. Compton
[Abstract]
Stripping Analysis at Bismuth-Based Electrodes
Pp. 183-190
Christos Kokkinos and Anastasios Economou
[Abstract]
Catalytic Adsorptive Stripping Voltammetry
at Film Electrodes Pp. 191-201
Andrzej Bobrowski and Jerzy Zarebski
[Abstract]
Solid Alloy Electrodes in Stripping Voltammetry
Pp. 202-205
Øyvind Mikkelsen, Kristina Strasunskiene,
Silje M. Skogvold and Knut H. Schrøder
[Abstract]
Strategies, Development and Applications of Polymer-Modified
Electrodes for Stripping Analysis Pp. 206-214
Carla Gouveia-Caridade and Christopher
M.A. Brett
[Abstract]
Recent Developments in Stripping Analysis on Microelectrodes
Pp. 215-228
Salvatore Daniele, M. Antonietta Baldo
and Carlo Bragato
[Abstract]
Microelectrode Arrays and Microfabricated Devices
in Electrochemical Stripping Analysis Pp. 229-241
Valerio Beni and Damien W.M. Arrigan
[Abstract]
Adsorptive Stripping Voltammetry of Environmental
Carcinogens Pp. 242-249
Jiri Barek, Karolina Peckova and Vlastimil
Vyskocil
[Abstract]
Electrochemical Stripping Techniques
in Analysis of Nucleic Acids and their Constituents
Pp. 250-262
Miroslav Fojta, František Jelen, Ludek Havran
and Emil Palecek
[Abstract]
Stripping Analysis Enhanced by Ultrasound, Electrode
Heating and Magnetic Fields Pp. 263-270
Peter Gründler
[Abstract]
Abstracts

[Back to top]
Editorial: Electrochemical Stripping Analysis
Electrochemical Stripping Analysis has always been
the electroanalytical technique of choice for trace and ultra-trace
determination of metals and organics. It is based on a preconcentration
step of the target analytes on a suitable working electrode
followed by a conventional voltammetric or chronopotentiometric
scan. Trace metals can be determined at µg L-1
or sub-µg L-1 levels after electrolytic preconcentration
while those not amenable to electrolysis can be monitored
after adsorptive accumulation of their complexes with appropriate
surface-activermined at race levels after spontaneous adsorptive
pree ligands. Similarly, numerous organic compounds can be
detconcentration. Application areas include environmental
analysis, clinical and biochemical analysis, food control
and industrial monitoring. This volume hosts a number of authoritative
reviews on the main advances in Stripping Analysis over the
last decade, authored by outstanding scientists in the field
of electrochemistry.
One major area that has attracted much research is the development
of new electrode materials. Mercury electrodes, that have
dominated Stripping Analysis since the invention of polarography,
are no longer desirable due to the toxicity of mercury and,
therefore, new types of alternative more environment-friendly
electrodes are sought.
The first review by Professor R.G. Compton’s group focuses
on the utility and the applications of boron-doped diamond
(BDD) electrodes in Stripping Analysis. BDD consists of a
diamond lattice p-type doped with boron to a level that ensures
good conductivity and electrochemical properties. These electrodes
offer a wide useful potential window, exhibit low background
currents (and therefore low limits of detection), provide
good stability and reproducibility while their hard and chemically
inert surface is less prone to fouling. A notable additional
feature of BDD electrodes is that they can be successfully
coupled to ultrasound or microwave radiation for signal enhancement
(the review by Professor P. Grundler discusses in detail these
techniques).
Nanoparticle-modified electrodes are another alternative and
are dealt with in the second review by Professor R.G. Compton’s
group. Nanoparticle-modified electrodes are fabricated by
covering the surface of a (usually carbonaceous) substrate
with randomly distributed metal (e.g. gold, silver, platinum
and bismuth) nanoparticles. The electrodes are characterised
by a high effective surface area, catalytic activity, enhanced
mass transport properties and reduced cost and can act as
disposable sensors in Stripping Analysis.
Dr. A. Economou’s group review the field of bismuth
and bismuth-modified electrodes. Bismuth electrodes have attracted
much attention since their introduction in 2000 since they
have negligible toxicity and their analytical features are
analogous to their mercury counterparts. In addition, the
fact that metallic bismuth is solid at room temperature offers
wide scope for the fabrication of bismuth-modified sensors.
The paper by Professor A. Bobrowski reviews the combination
of metal film electrodes with Catalytic Adsorptive Stripping
Analysis. This Variant of Adsorptive Stripping Analysis exploits
catalytic effects to further enhance the sensitivity, leading
to the lowest limits of detection yet obtained by any electroanalytical
technique. Replacing the pure liquid mercury electrodes traditionally
used in Catalytic Adsorptive Stripping Analysis with solid
metal (mercury, bismuth or lead) film electrodes reduces mercury
waste and provides more robust sensors.
Amalgam and alloy electrodes for environmental analysis is
the subject of the review by Professor O. Mikkelsen and his
group. Alloy electrodes are made of noble metals (mainly silver)
in which a second metal (which possesses a high hydrogen overvoltage,
such as mercury or bismuth) is added in small amounts. These
electrodes are easy to fabricate and maintain, have a wide
cathodic potential window, exhibit low toxicity and can be
used for on-site monitoring of trace metals by Stripping Analysis.
In their paper, Professor C.M.A. Brett’s group present
an overview of polymer modified electrodes in Stripping Analysis.
These electrodes are prepared by modifying the surface of
a solid electrode with an ion-exchange, size-exclusion or
conductive polymer film. The main utility of such coatings
is to improve the selectivity of the determination by preventing
fouling of the electrode surface by surface-active macromeolecules.
However, polymeric coatings may additionally improve the sensitivity
and long-term stability of the underlying electrodes.
The general trend towards miniaturization has also affected
research in Stripping Analysis. Microlectrodes, nanoelectrodes
and arrays of microelectrodes are comprehensively reviewed
in the papers authored by the teams of Professor S. Daniele
and Dr. D. Arrigan. The advantages of these miniaturized electrodes
over the traditional macrolectrodes are the higher S/N ratios,
faster mass-transfer, low ohmic drop and scope for mass-fabrication
of disposable sensors by lithographic and/or microelectronic
technologies. Numerous strategies for the preparation of miniaturized
electrodes and for applications using Stripping Analysis are
presented.
The utility of Stripping Analysis in two emerging applications
areas, namely the determination of chemical carcinogens and
the analysis of nucleic acids, is demonstrated in the reviews
by the groups of Professor J. Barek and Dr. M. Fojta, respectively.
Professor J. Barek and his coworkers review the determination
of environmental carcinogens by Adsorptive Stripping Analysis.
The technique can be used as a screening step for a host of
carcinogenic compounds including nitrated polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons, azo compounds, mycotoxins, aromatic amines and
metabolites of anitumour drugs. The authors consider Stripping
Analysis as one of the best “fit for the purpose”
methods.
The review by Dr. M. Fojta’s team focuses on a very
contemporary topic, namely the study of nucleic acids and
their constituents by Stripping Analysis. Various strateg
ies for determining nucleic acids and their components by
different variants of Stripping Analysis are presented. Stripping
analysis techniques and DNA-modified electrodes can be used
in studies of DNA hybridization while DNA-modified electrodes
can be applied as electrochemical biosensors in studies of
DNA interactions with a variety of substances, including mutagens,
carcinogens, drugs and environmental pollutants.
The last review, authored by Professor P. Grundler, discusses
in detail various novel, unusual and promising approaches
exploiting physical phenomena (such as heat, ultrasound and
magnetism) for enhancing mass-transfer during the preconcentra-tion
step in Stripping Analysis.
At his point, it must be noted that space limitations did
not allow coverage of all the developments in Stripping Analysis
and important subjects have been omitted including chemically
modified electrodes, carbon-paste electrodes, conductive polymer
electrodes and recent research on environmental applications
of Electrochemical Stripping techniques.
However, the collection of reviews in this Special Issue brings
together the expertise of different research groups and presents
new and exciting research in the field of Stripping Analysis.
It is the hope of the Editor and the Authors that this volume
will prove useful to both researchers in this specialized
field and to other analysts that wish to exploit the analytical
power of Stripping Analysis in their own work.
Finally, as Guest Editor of this Special Issue I would like
to take this opportunity to express my thanks to the Authors
for their excellent reviews and to the Publishers for being
willing to devote the present Volume to Stripping Analysis.
Dr. A. Economou
Guest Editor
Current Analytical Chemistry
Department of Chemistry
University of Athens
Athens 15771
Greece
E-mail: aeconomo@chem.uoa.gr
[Back to top]
Stripping Analysis using Boron-Doped Diamond Electrodes
Sarah E. Ward Jones and Richard
G. Compton
Boron-doped diamond (BDD) is one of a number of solid
electrode materials that have been developed as alternatives
to mercury electrodes for electroanalysis. Electrodes made
from boron-doped diamond possess many attractive properties
including a wide potential window, low background currents,
high resistance to electrode fouling, ease of chemical modification,
long term stability and the hard and flat nature of the electrode
surface. This review covers work on a wide range of analytical
applications and enhancement techniques for stripping voltammetry
at boron-doped diamond electrodes including the use of power
ultrasound, microwave radiation, lasers and microelectrode
arrays.
[Back to top]
Fabrication and Applications of Nanoparticle-Modified
Electrodes in Stripping Analysis
Sarah E. Ward Jones and Richard G. Compton
In recent years significant work had been carried out
on the fabrication and application of nanoparticlemodified
electrodes for trace heavy metal detection with the view to
producing sensitive and versatile sensors. Much has focused
on the use of gold nanoparticles for the detection of arsenic
and other toxins, however silver, platinum and bismuth nanoparticles
have also been researched. This review covers a range of different
nanoparticle fabrication and electrode modification methods
for the production of electrodes which have been applied using
stripping voltammetry. Particular attention is paid to their
applications and success as sensors.
[Back to top]
Stripping Analysis at Bismuth-Based Electrodes
Christos Kokkinos and Anastasios Economou
This article is intended as an overview of bismuth-based
electrodes as applied to electrochemical stripping analysis.
These electrodes rely on a bismuth or bismuth-modified active
surface and, while they have analytical performance comparable
to mercury electrodes, are characterized by negligible toxicity
in comparison to their mercury counterparts. These properties
make them ideally suited as sensors for trace monitoring by
electrochemical stripping analysis. Topics covered in this
review are the main types of bismuth electrodes and their
fabrication, the analytical characteristics and common interferences
of bismuth-based electrodes in stripping analysis and typical
applications of these sensors in industrial, food, clinical
and environmental analysis by stripping techniques. Finally,
the future prospects of bismuth electrodes in conjunction
with stripping analysis are critically discussed.
[Back to top]
Catalytic Adsorptive Stripping Voltammetry at Film Electrodes
Andrzej Bobrowski and Jerzy Zarebski
The recent tendency to replace liquid mercury by less
toxic electrode materials has led many analysts to investigate
and design various thin film electrodes generated ex-situ
or in-situ by electroplating the selected metals at different
supports, and to develop new stripping and catalytic adsorptive
stripping voltammetric procedures that would use them.
The catalytic adsorptive stripping voltammetry (CAdSV) coupling
of very efficient adsorptive accumulation of the electroactive
species on the electrode surface with the catalytic reaction
provides a significant amplification of the analytical response,
and, consequently, a considerable decrease of the detection
limit, as well as an improvement in the selectivity of the
determination.
The present article presents an overview of recent progress
in the research on catalytic adsorptive stripping voltammetry,
with a focus on procedures in which film electrodes were utilized.
[Back to top]
Solid Alloy Electrodes in Stripping Voltammetry
Øyvind Mikkelsen, Kristina Strasunskiene,
Silje M. Skogvold and Knut H. Schrøder
In voltammetry, the choice of working electrode is of
outmost importance to fulfil needed demands and criteria.
Heyrovsky's invention of the polarographic method started
in 1922, for which he was granted the Nobel Prize in 1959,
was a pioneer work within the field of electroanalytical chemistry.
In polarography, the working electrode is normally a liquid
mercury drop electrode, which possesses several advantageous
properties for this purpose. Voltammetric methods have recently
proved to have a great potential within off-laboratory environmental
monitoring, which has created a demand for additional electrodes
specifically for such purposes. This review gives a short
overview of the solid silver amalgam electrode and some additional
alloy electrodes, which during the last 10 years have been
reported to be suitable alternative electrodes to liquid mercury,
especially for environmental monitoring.
[Back to top]
Strategies, Development and Applications of Polymer-Modified
Electrodes for Stripping Analysis
Carla Gouveia-Caridade and Christopher
M.A. Brett
Recent progress in polymer modified electrodes for stripping
analysis is surveyed, mainly concerned with ionexchange polymer
and conducting polymer coatings on mercury thin film electrodes
and other solid electrode substrates. Film preparation methods
are discussed and applications involving different types of
polymer film or polymer film composites illustrated, with
emphasis on recent literature published in the last five years.
[Back to top]
Recent Developments in Stripping Analysis on Microelectrodes
Salvatore Daniele, M. Antonietta Baldo
and Carlo Bragato
This review surveys the main aspects of the combination
of microelectrodes and stripping analysis, including recent
developments in working microelectrodes, analytical methodologies,
instrumentation, and applications in both synthetic and real
matrices. Emphasis is given to papers published since 2000.
[Back to top]
Microelectrode Arrays and Microfabricated Devices
in Electrochemical Stripping Analysis
Valerio Beni and Damien W.M. Arrigan
In this article a comprehensive overview of the developments
in the field of electrochemical stripping analysis with microelectrode
arrays and microfabricated devices is presented. Due to the
vastness of the topic, this mini-review deals only with the
use of regular microelectrode arrays. After the description
of the main fabrication methodologies employed, a large part
of the review is dedicated to applications, categorised by
the electrode material. Microelectrode arrays have found application
in several areas of electroanalytical science including clinical
and environmental analysis. They have been used for the detection
of heavy metals in waters, soil extracts and blood, proving
to be reliable analytical devices and bringing the advantages
of low-cost, simplicity of use and easy adaptability to field
measurement. In many applications, limits of detection are
sub-parts per billion. Finally a short section of the review
discusses miniaturised potentiostats.
[Back to top]
Adsorptive Stripping Voltammetry of Environmental
Carcinogens
Jiri Barek, Karolina Peckova and Vlastimil
Vyskocil
This review describes our recent results regarding adsorptive
stripping voltammetric determination of submicromolar and
nanomolar concentrations of various environmentally important
chemical carcinogens using both traditional (hanging mercury
drop electrode, carbon paste electrode) and non-traditional
types of electrodes (solid amalgam electrodes, glassy carbon
paste electrodes, carbon ink film electrodes, solid composite
electrodes). The review concentrates on our own results in
the context of the general development in the filed.
[Back to top]
Electrochemical Stripping Techniques in Analysis of Nucleic
Acids and their Constituents
Miroslav Fojta, František Jelen, Ludek Havran
and Emil Palecek
The ability of nucleic acids (NA) and their components
to accumulate at electrode surfaces and electrochemical properties
of these species are closely related. This review is devoted
to electrochemical stripping techniques applied in NA studies.
Cathodic or anodic stripping voltammetry have been used for
a highly sensitive determination of nucleobases, nucleosides,
nucleotides or acid-hydrolyzed NAs, based on formation of
sparingly soluble complexes of the NA constituents with electrochemically
generated mercury or copper(I) ions. DNAs, RNAs and their
synthetic analogues, either unmodified or labeled with electroactive
markers, have been analyzed by adsorptive stripping (AdS)
techniques with mercury, mercury film, amalgam and carbon-based
electrodes. Strong adsorption of NAs at the electrode surfaces
has been utilized in adsorptive transfer stripping (AdTS)
techniques. In AdTS, a NA-modified electrode is prepared by
adsorptive accumulation of the NA at the electrode surface,
followed by transfer into background electrolyte not containing
any NA. NA-modified electrodes can be used as simple electrochemical
NA sensors. Recent applications of AdS and AdTS in NA microanalysis,
in detection of DNA damage as well as in studies of DNA hybridization
or DNA-protein interactions are reviewed.
[Back to top]
Stripping Analysis Enhanced by Ultrasound, Electrode
Heating and Magnetic Fields
Peter Gründler
Stripping analysis is a two-step procedure. In the first
step, the analyte is accumulated at an electrode surface either
by electrolysis or by adsorption. In the second step, the
deposited material is removed, typically by electrolysis.
The second step is the source of the analytical signal. Sensitivity
of the method mainly depends on the amount of substance which
is transferred to the electrode surface during accumulation.
The methods reviewed make use of unconventional techniques
to enhance efficiency of accumulation. By ultrasound, a combined
action of thermal and mechanical impacts, partially with extreme
energetic states, causes improvement of analytical results.
Heating of electrodes or of a nearelectrode area induces laminar
electrolyte flow acting as stirring, combined with increased
surface temperature that is helpful to lower kinetic hindrances.
Magnetic fields in a cell with arbitrarily increased deposition
current enhances convection without additional thermal effects.
Most of the techniques reviewed are able to improve the efficiency
of stripping analysis much more than could be done by driving
classical stirring up to the limits.
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