Alvaro Colina
University of Burgos
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Alvaro Colina.
Analytical Chemistry | 2012
Diana Vilela; Jesús Garoz; Alvaro Colina; María Cristina González; Alberto Escarpa
Novel single-walled carbon nanotube press-transfer electrodes (SW-PTEs) for microfluidic sensing are proposed. In this approach, carbon nanotubes are press-transferred on poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) substrates and are easily coupled to microfluidic chips and act as the exclusive transducer in electrochemical sensing. The detector design consisted of a press-transferred SW film (7 mm × 1 mm) positioned and centered on the PMMA substrate (33 mm × 9 mm). The analytical performance of the SW-PTEs was deeply evaluated using two commercial SWs sources and employing a mixture of dopamine and catechol as model analytes. Analyte detection was influenced by the volume of commercial SW dispersion used in the fabrication of SW-PTEs, with 5 mL taken from a dispersion of 0.5 mg/100 mL being the most favorable volume. In addition, excellent repeatability (relative standard deviation (RSD) of ≤7%, n = 5), interelectrodes reproducibility (RSD ≤ 9%, n = 5), and an extreme resistance to fouling were obtained even after 1 h of microchip analysis with RSD values of ≤4% and ≤9% (n = 15) for migration times and peak heights, respectively. Good sensitivity, remarkable signal-to-noise characteristics, and a well-defined linear concentration dependence (r ≥ 0.990) was also obtained, which allowed these novel detectors to be considered as valuable tools for quantitative analysis. Analytical characterization of the SW-PTEs by field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM) revealed individual bundles of SWs that were highly ordered over the PMMA at the background where the SW bundles were embedded on the PMMA substrate, giving the electrode a high stability. Furthermore, the laboratory-fabricated SW-PTEs can be afforded in any laboratory since they do not require clean-room facilities and are highly compatible with microfluidic scale, mass production, and disposability. In addition, the proposed approach draws new and exciting horizons for electrochemical microfluidic sensing, such as the use of other pure or hybrid nanomaterials and also the possibilities to incorporate biomolecules for highly selective sensing.
Analytical Chemistry | 2012
Noelia González-Diéguez; Alvaro Colina; Jesús López-Palacios; Aránzazu Heras
A new device to perform spectroelectrochemical measurements in the UV/visible spectral region using screen-printed electrodes has been developed. Neurotransmitter dopamine has been selected as a proof of concept of the capabilities of the new device. The results obtained have allowed us both to study the oxidation mechanism of dopamine and to carry out the spectroelectrochemical detection of this neurotransmitter. Differences in dopamine oxidation mechanism have been observed depending on the initial concentration. Thus, dopamine concentrations lower than 10(-3) M led to a higher generation of dopaminochrome and its derivatives with a band centered at 305 nm, which was the best wavelength to determine dopamine spectrophotometrically at these concentrations. However, if dopamine concentration is higher than 10(-3) M, dopaminoquinone is stable enough to use its maximum of absorbance, 395 nm, to detect this neurotransmitter. Dopamine concentration can also be calculated from the electrochemical data in spectroelectrochemistry, the results being comparable to that obtained from spectroscopic data. Comparison between spectrophotometric and electrochemical determinations demonstrates that the two methods measure this analyte indistinctively, proving that spectroelectrochemistry represents an autovalidated technique. Partial least-squares regression has also been used, obtaining good results in the full dopamine concentration range. Finally, as spectroelectrochemistry is an intrinsically trilinear technique, PARAFAC has been used to study the effect of probable interfering species.
Analytical Chemistry | 2015
Jesus Garoz-Ruiz; Aránzazu Heras; Susana Palmero; Alvaro Colina
A really easy method to transfer commercial single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) to different substrates is proposed. In this paper, a homogeneous transference of SWCNTs films to nonconductor and transparent supports, such as polyethylene terephthalate, glass, and quartz, and to conductor supports, such as indium tin oxide, aluminum, highly ordered pyrolytic graphite, and glassy carbon, was achieved using a very fast, reproducible, and clean methodology. In order to test these transferences, SWCNTs films transferred on quartz were used as working optically UV-vis transparent electrodes due to their optimal electrical and optical properties. A new easy-to-use, homemade optical fiber based cell for bidimensional spectroelectrochemistry was developed, offering the possibility to measure in normal and parallel configuration. The cell was tested with ferrocenemethanol, a compound widely used in electrochemistry but scarcely studied by spectroelectrochemistry, covering the UV-vis spectral region.
Analytical Chemistry | 2012
Daniel Izquierdo; Alberto Martínez; Aránzazu Heras; Jesús López-Palacios; Virginia Ruiz; Robert A. W. Dryfe; Alvaro Colina
Spatial scanning spectroelectrochemistry is a new analytical technique that provides spectral information at different distances from an electrified liquid/liquid interface where an electrochemical process takes place. As a proof of concept, we have studied two different electrochemical processes at the electrified liquid/liquid interface: (1) Ru(bpy)(3)(2+) transfer through the water/1,2-dichloroethane interface and (2) electrodeposition of Pd nanoparticles at the water/1,2-dichloroethane interface. The instrumental setup developed consists of a movable slit for the light beam to sample at well-defined positions on both sides of the interface, providing important information about the chemical process occurring. If the slit is scanned at different distances from the interface during an electrochemical experiment, a complete picture of the reactions and equilibria in the diffusion layer can be obtained. For example, in the case of the Ru(bpy)(3)(2+), the experiments show clearly how the complex is transferred from one phase to the other. In the case of electrosynthesis of Pd nanoparticles, it is demonstrated that nanoparticles are not only deposited at the interface but diffuse to the aqueous bulk solution. These in situ observations were confirmed by ex situ experiments using transmission electron microscopy.
Analytical Chemistry | 2016
D. Ibañez; Jesus Garoz-Ruiz; Aránzazu Heras; Alvaro Colina
The development of a new device based on the use of UV-vis bare optical fibers in a long optical path length configuration and the measurement of the Raman response in normal arrangement allows us to perform UV-vis and Raman spectroelectrochemistry simultaneously in a single experiment. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that a spectroelectrochemistry device is able to record both spectroscopic responses at the same time, which further expands the versatility of spectroelectrochemistry techniques and enables us to obtain much more high-quality information in a single experiment. Three different electrochemical systems, such as ferrocyanide, dopamine, and 3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene, have been studied to validate the cell and to demonstrate the performance of the device. Processes that take place in solution can be properly distinguished from processes that occur on the electrode surface during the electrochemical experiment, providing a whole picture of the reactions taking place at the electrode/solution interface. Therefore, this device allows us to study a larger number of complex electrochemical processes from different points of view taking into account not only the UV-vis spectral changes in the solution adjacent to the electrode but also the Raman signal at any location. Furthermore, complementary information, which could not be unambiguously extracted without considering together the two spectroscopic signals and the electrochemical response, is obtained in a novel way.
Electrochemistry Communications | 2002
Virginia Ruiz; Alvaro Colina; Aránzazu Heras; Jesús López-Palacios; Renato Seeber
Abstract Bidimensional chronoabsorptometry is a novel spectroelectrochemical technique that monitors simultaneously three different signals: current and absorbance both normal to the electrode plane and parallel to this plane during a time in which a fixed potential is imposed. This technique is applied in the visible range to the study of the electropolymerisation of 4,4 ′ -bis(2-methylbutylthio)- 2,2 ′ -bithiophene (MBTBT). Experiments are performed in a spectroelectrochemical cell under finite diffusion conditions (thin layer cell) with the aim of interpreting the processes taking place both at the electrode surface and in the adjacent solution during the potentiostatic electrogeneration and deposition of the polymer. Correlations are drawn out among the trends of the oligomers concentration in solution, the polymer electrodeposition and charging, and the current flow, on the time scales of the different steps of the process.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 2008
Eva Tesařová; Aránzazu Heras; Alvaro Colina; Virginia Ruiz; Ivan Švancara; Karel Vytřas; Jesús López-Palacios
UV-vis reflection spectroelectrochemistry has proven to be a very useful multiresponse technique to evaluate the quality of bismuth films obtained by electrochemical deposition on glassy carbon electrodes (GCEs). Bismuth films have recently emerged as a promising and environmental friendly alternative to mercury electrodes for stripping analysis. Spectroelectrochemical measurements, carried out in a flow cell, allowed us to follow in situ the electrodeposition and stripping of bismuth and cadmium. Electrochemical and spectroscopic responses individually have led to successfully quantify the amount of cadmium in test solutions.
Langmuir | 2015
Barak D. B. Aaronson; Jesus Garoz-Ruiz; Joshua C. Byers; Alvaro Colina; Patrick R. Unwin
A number of renewable energy systems require an understanding and correlation of material properties and photoelectrochemical activity on the micro to nanoscale. Among these, conducting polymer electrodes continue to be important materials. In this contribution, an ultrasensitive scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM) platform is used to electrodeposit microscale thin films of poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) on an optically transparent gold electrode and to correlate the morphology (film thickness and structural order) with photoactivity. The electrochemical growth of P3HT begins with a thin ordered film up to 10 nm thick, after which a second more disordered film is deposited, as revealed by micro-Raman spectroscopy. A decrease in photoactivity for the thicker films, measured in situ immediately following film deposition, is attributed to an increase in bulk film disorder that limits charge transport. Higher resolution ex situ SECCM phototransient measurements, using a smaller diameter probe, show local variations in photoactivity within a given deposit. Even after aging, thinner, more ordered regions within a deposit exhibit sustained enhanced photocurrent densities compared to areas where the film is thicker and more disordered. The platform opens up new possibilities for high-throughput combinatorial correlation studies, by allowing materials fabrication and high spatial resolution probing of processes in photoelectrochemical materials.
RSC Advances | 2016
Jesus Garoz-Ruiz; D. Ibañez; Edna C. Romero; Virginia Ruiz; Aránzazu Heras; Alvaro Colina
Optically transparent electrodes (OTEs) are needed for a wide range of applications such as solar cells, printable electronics, touch screens, light emitting diodes or flexible displays. Furthermore, OTEs are required for normal transmission spectroelectrochemistry measurements to obtain simultaneously electrochemical and spectroscopic responses. The search for new materials with a good transparency and conductivity, the basic requirements for an OTE, is outstanding. For this reason, carbon allotropes, such as graphene nanoplatelets (GNPs) and single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), have been used in the present work in order to fabricate GNPs/SWCNTs-OTEs. The methodology used to fabricate these hybrid electrodes, based on vacuum filtration techniques, has several advantages such as the use of commercial nanomaterials, an easy cleaning of the final electrode and the availability of the process to almost any laboratory. The optimization of transparency and conductivity of these new electrodes has been achieved by design of experiments, showing that a percolation threshold of SWCNTs needs to be reached to ensure a minimum conductivity. The suitable performance of the GNPs/SWCNTs-OTEs has been validated by studying a film of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) by spectroelectrochemistry.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017
Joaquin Barrera; D. Ibañez; Aránzazu Heras; Virginia Ruiz; Alvaro Colina
Changes in the optical properties of graphene quantum dots (GQD) during electrochemical reduction and oxidation were investigated by photoluminescence (PL) spectroelectrochemistry, which provided direct in situ evidence of the dependence of GQD luminescence on their redox state. We demonstrated that GQD PL intensity was enhanced upon reduction (quantum yield increased from 0.44 to 0.55) and substantially bleached during oxidation (quantum yield ∼0.12). Moreover, PL emission blue/red-shifted upon GQD reduction/oxidation, rendering information about electronic transitions involved in the redox processes, namely, the π → π* and the n → π* transitions between energy levels of the aromatic sp2 domains and the functional groups, respectively. PL intensity changes during GQD reduction/oxidation resulted from a variation in structural changes in GQD as a result of charge injection, as corroborated by in situ Raman spectroelectrochemistry.