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Electrochemical Nanoprobes for Single-Cell Analysis, ACS Nano., 2014
The measurement of key molecules in individual cells with minimal disruption to the biological milieu is the next frontier in single-cell analyses. Nanoscale devices are ideal analytical tools because of their small size and their potential for high spatial and temporal resolution recordings. Here, we report the fabrication of disk-shaped carbon nanoelectrodes whose radius can be precisely tuned within the range 5–200 nm. The functionalization of the nanoelectrode with platinum allowed the monitoring of oxygen consumption outside and inside a brain slice. Furthermore, we show that nanoelectrodes of this type can be used to impale individual cells to perform electrochemical measurements within the cell with minimal disruption to cell function. These nanoelectrodes can be fabricated combined with scanning ion conductance microscopy probes, which should allow high resolution electrochemical mapping of species on or in living cells.
Nanoscale Electrocatalysis: Visualizing Oxygen Reduction at Pristine, Kinked, and Oxidized Sites on Individual Carbon Nanotubes, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2014
There is a prevailing and widely adopted view that carbon nanotubes, which are finding considerable application in energy, healthcare, and electronics applications, are highly (electro)catalytically inert unless modified, doped, or defected. By visualizing the electrochemical reduction of oxygen (hydrogen peroxide generation) at high resolution along pristine (defect-free) regions of individual single-walled carbon nanotubes, we show that there is, in fact, significant activity comparable to that of standard gold electrocatalysts. Moreover, the activity is greatly enhanced at strained (kinked) sites and regions modified by oxidation. Single-walled carbon nanotubes are thus effective electrocatalysts in their own right and not just supports for other materials.
Dual-electrode measurements in a meniscus microcapillary electrochemical cell using a high aspect ratio carbon fibre ultramicroelectrode, J. Electroanal. Chem., 2014
The electrodeposition of Pt nanoparticles (NPs) on two-dimensional single walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) network electrodes is investigated as a means of tailoring electrode surfaces with a well-defined amount of electrocatalytic material. Both Pt NP deposition and electrocatalytic studies are undertaken using the microcapillary electrochemical method (MCEM), enabling multiple microscale measurements to be performed quickly and easily on the same SWNT sample. Using this approach, Pt catalysts with high specific surface areas relative to the geometric electrode area (defined by the meniscus contact of the MCEM probe with the Si/SiO2 substrate bearing the SWNT network) can be controlled precisely over three orders of magnitude. This enables the influence of the specific surface area of an electrocatalyst on activity to be investigated, as demonstrated by studies of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and methanol oxidation reaction (MOR).