Artículo de revista
Reduced graphene oxides: influence of the reduction method on the electrocatalytic effect towards nucleic acid oxidation
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Nanomaterials 2017, 7, 168
10.3390/nano7070168
Autor
Báez, Daniela F.
Pardo, Helena
Laborda, Ignacio
Marco, José F.
Yañez Soto, Claudia
Bollo Dragnic, Soledad
Institución
Resumen
For the first time a critical analysis of the influence that four different graphene oxide reduction methods have on the electrochemical properties of the resulting reduced graphene oxides (RGOs) is reported. Starting from the same graphene oxide, chemical (CRGO), hydrothermal (hTRGO), electrochemical (ERGO), and thermal (TRGO) reduced graphene oxide were produced. The materials were fully characterized and the topography and electroactivity of the resulting glassy carbon modified electrodes were also evaluated. An oligonucleotide molecule was used as a model of DNA electrochemical biosensing. The results allow for the conclusion that TRGO produced the RGOs with the best electrochemical performance for oligonucleotide electroanalysis. A clear shift in the guanine oxidation peak potential to lower values (similar to 0.100 V) and an almost two-fold increase in the current intensity were observed compared with the other RGOs. The electrocatalytic effect has a multifactorial explanation because the TRGO was the material that presented a higher polydispersity and lower sheet size, thus exposing a larger quantity of defects to the electrode surface, which produces larger physical and electrochemical areas.