The specially deposited Prussian Blue denoted as "artificial peroxidase" was used as a transducer for hydrogen peroxide. The electrocatalyst was stable, highly active, and selective to hydrogen peroxide reduction in the presence of oxygen, which allowed sensing of H2O2 around 0.0 V (Ag/AgCl). Glutamate oxidase was immobilized on the surface of the Prussian Blue-modified electrode in a Nafion layer using a nonaqueous enzymology approach. The calibration range for glutamate in flow injection system was 1 x 10(-7)-1 x 10(-4) M. The lowest concentration of glutamate detected (1 x 10(-7) M) and the highest sensitivity in the linear range of 0.21 A M-1 cm-2 were achieved. The influence of reductants was practically avoided using the low potential of an indicator electrode (0.0 V Ag/AgCl). The attractive performance characteristics of the glutamate biosensor illustrate the advantages of Prussian Blue-based "artificial peroxidase" as transducer for hydrogen peroxide detection.
A review is presented dealing with the use of carbon paste amperometric electrodes for electroanalytical purposes, with either the surface or the bulk being modified with biologically derived material such as enzymes, tissues, and cells. It covers virtually all the publications which have appeared from the very first enzyme-modified carbon paste electrode up to early 1994 and includes 220 references.
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