Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.133, No.45, 18289-18295, 2011
Stochastic Amperometric Fluctuations as a Probe for Dynamic Adsorption in Nanofluidic Electrochemical Systems
Adsorption of analyte molecules is ubiquitous in nanofluidic channels due to their large surface-to-volume ratios. It is also difficult to quantify clue to the nanometric scale of these channels. We propose a simple method to probe dynamic adsorption at electrodes that are embedded in nanofluidic channels or which enclose nanoscopic volumes. The amperometric method relies on measuring the amplitude of the fluctuations of the redox cycling current that arise when the channel is diffusively coupled to a bulk reservoir. We demonstrate the versatility of this new method by quantifying adsorption for several redox couples, investigating the dependence of adsorption on the electrode potential and studying the effect of functionalizing the electrodes with self-assembled monolayers of organothiol molecules bearing polar end groups. These self-assembled monolayer coatings are shown to significantly reduce the adsorption of the molecules on to the electrodes. The detection method is not limited to electrodes in nanochannels and can be easily extended to redox cycling systems that enclose very small volumes, in particular scanning electrochemical microscopy with nanoelectrodes. It thus opens the way for imaging spatial heterogeneity with respect to adsorption, as well as rational design of interfaces for redox cycling based sensors.