Nucleophilic and electrophilic displacements on covalently modified carbon: introducing 4,4′-bipyridinium on grafted glassy carbon electrodes
- 6 April 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) in New Journal of Chemistry
- Vol. 29 (5), 659-666
- https://doi.org/10.1039/b415623d
Abstract
4,4′-Bipyridinium (i.e., viologen) was immobilized on 4-(chloromethyl)phenyl grafted glassy carbon electrodes by a nucleophilic substitution reaction involving 1-ethyl- or 1-benzyl-4-(4′-pyridyl)pyridinium. Reaction times of about 5 days were required for these surface-constrained processes to go to completion in aqueous solution at room temperature. The applicability of the described procedure was demonstrated by performing the equivalent modification in 2 steps by reacting first with 4,4′-bipyridine, followed by quaternization of the available nitrogen to obtain the viologen functionality, that is, the surface acts as a nucleophile in a substitution reaction. However, the quaternization step was found to be possible for introducing the benzyl group but not the ethyl group. The covalently modified electrodes were reasonably stable to repeated electrochemical sweeping in acetonitrile with a 25% decrease in the observed electroactivity after 100 sweeps at a sweep rate of 2 V s−1. The coverage was determined from the electrochemical response of the viologen moiety to be approximately 3 × 10−10 mol cm−2. In addition to cyclic voltammetry, the presence of viologen was demonstrated by means of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. Scanning images (500 × 500 µm2) obtained by the latter technique indicated that the molecules were distributed uniformly over the entire surface. Scanning tunnelling microscopy was used to follow the individual steps of the modification procedure on highly ordered pyrolytic graphite.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Electron Transport in Self-Assembled Bipyridinium MultilayersThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2004
- Electrochemical Reduction of a Conjugated Cinnamic Acid Diazonium Salt as an Immobilization Matrix for Glucose BiosensorElectroanalysis, 2003
- Potential-Dependence of Self-Limited Films Formed by Reduction of Aryldiazonium Salts at Glassy Carbon ElectrodesLangmuir, 2000
- Voltammetric and Electroreflectance Study of Thiol-Functionalized Viologen Monolayers on Polycrystalline Gold: Effect of Anion Binding to a Viologen MoietyLangmuir, 1999
- Derivatization of Carbon Surfaces by Anodic Oxidation of Arylacetates. Electrochemical Manipulation of the Grafted FilmsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1997
- Covalent Modification of Carbon Surfaces by Aryl Radicals Generated from the Electrochemical Reduction of Diazonium SaltsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1997
- Indirect Detection of Alkaline Earth Ions by the Voltammetric Response of Ferricyanide Anion at a Glassy Carbon Electrode Anodized in 1-Octanol.CHEMICAL & PHARMACEUTICAL BULLETIN, 1996
- Covalent modification of carbon electrodes for voltammetric differentiation of dopamine and ascorbic acidAnalytica Chimica Acta, 1995
- Protein adsorption at glassy carbon electrodes: The effect of covalently bound surface groupsElectroanalysis, 1995
- Direct Covalent Modification of Glassy Carbon Surfaces with 1-Alkanols by Electrochemical Oxidation.CHEMICAL & PHARMACEUTICAL BULLETIN, 1994