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Enhanced Electrochemiluminescence at the Gas/Liquid Interface of Bubbles Propelled into Solution

Sara Knežević, Joseba Totoricaguena-Gorriño, Rajendra Kumar Reddy Gajjala, Bruno F. Hermenegildo, Leire Ruiz‐Rubio, José Luis Vilas‐Vilela, S. Lanceros‐Méndez, Nešo Šojić, F. Javier del Campo

2024Journal of the American Chemical Society43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electrochemiluminescence (ECL) is typically confined to a micrometric region from the electrode surface. This study demonstrates that ECL emission can extend up to several millimeters away from the electrode employing electrogenerated chlorine bubbles. The mechanism behind this bubble-enhanced ECL was investigated using an Au microelectrode in chloride-containing and chloride-free electrolyte solutions. We discovered that ECL emission at the gas/solution interface is driven by two parallel effects. First, the bubble corona effect facilitates the generation of hydroxyl radicals capable of oxidizing luminol while the bubble is attached to the surface. Second, hypochlorite generated from chlorine sustains luminol emission for over 200 s and extends the emission range up to 5 mm into the solution, following bubble detachment. The new approach can increase the emission intensity of luminol-based assays 5-fold compared to the conventional method. This is demonstrated through a glucose bioassay, using a midrange mobile phone camera for detection. These findings significantly expand the potential applications of ECL by extending its effective range in time and space.

Topics & Concepts

ElectrochemiluminescenceChemistryLuminolOxidizing agentChlorineElectrolyteBubbleElectrodeChlorideLight emissionAnalytical Chemistry (journal)CathodeInorganic chemistryPhotochemistryDetection limitOptoelectronicsChromatographyOrganic chemistryPhysical chemistryComputer scienceParallel computingPhysicsAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesBiosensors and Analytical DetectionElectrochemical Analysis and Applications
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