Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry | 2021

Immobilization of glucose oxidase on plasma-treated polyethylene for non-invasive glucose detection

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Glucose oxidase (GOx) has been covalently immobilized onto plasma-treated low-density polyethylene (PT-LDPE) deposited by solvent-casting onto a glassy carbon electrode. PT-LDPE acts as a very simple and cheap mediator between the enzyme and the conducting substrate, the resulting electrode (GOx/PT-LDPE/GC) being able to detect effectively glucose under conditions of pH and temperature that mimic those of sweat. Glucose has been successfully monitored using GOx/PT-LDPE/GC electrodes via both, chronoamperometric and voltammetric measurements. The lowest limit of detection (LOD) was obtained with electrodes prepared with a GOx concentration of 5\xa0mg/mL. This represents a significant reduction in the amount of enzyme as compared to electrodes obtained by dropping GOx onto PT-LDPE/GC (non-covalent immobilization), in which the required enzyme concentration was 33\xa0mg/mL. Furthermore, the LOD has been decreased two orders of magnitude, from 1.3\xa0mM for sensors without covalent immobilization to less than 0.05\xa0mM. It is worth noting that the latter value is fully compatible with glucose concentration in sweat, which ranges from 0.06 to 0.11\xa0mM for healthy patients and from 0.01 to 1\xa0mM in diabetic patients. Moreover, the developed sensor is able to promote the reduction of hydrogen peroxide produced during the oxidation of glucose to gluconolactone.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.jelechem.2021.115509
Language English
Journal Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry

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