There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
Doped carbon nanotubes are now extremely attractive and important nanomaterials in
bioanalytical applications due to their unique physicochemical properties. In this
paper, the boron-doped carbon nanotubes (BCNTs) were used in amperometric biosensors.
It has been found that the electrocatalytic activity of the BCNTs modified glassy
carbon (GC) electrode toward the oxidation of hydrogen peroxide is much higher than
that of the un-doped CNTs modified electrode due to the large amount of edge sites
and oxygen-rich groups located at the defective sites induced by boron doping. Glucose
oxidase (GOD) was selected as the model enzyme and immobilized on the BCNTs modified
glassy carbon electrode by entrapping GOD into poly(o-aminophenol) film. The performance
of the sensor was investigated by electrochemical methods. At an optimum potential
of +0.60 V and pH 7.0, the biosensor exhibits good characteristics, such as high sensitivity
(171.2 nA mM(-1)), low detection limit (3.6 microM), short response time (within 6s),
satisfactory anti-interference ability and good stability. The apparent Michaelis-Menten
constant (K(m)(app)) is 15.19 mM. The applicability to the whole blood analysis of
the enzyme electrode was also evaluated.