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Dive into the research topics where Maxim B. Joseph is active.

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Featured researches published by Maxim B. Joseph.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Ultrasensitive Detection of Dopamine Using a Carbon Nanotube Network Microfluidic Flow Electrode

Siriwat Sansuk; Eleni Bitziou; Maxim B. Joseph; James A. Covington; Martyn G. Boutelle; Patrick R. Unwin; Julie V. Macpherson

The electrochemical measurement of dopamine (DA), in phosphate buffer solution (pH 7.4), with a limit of detection (LOD) of ∼5 pM in 50 μL (∼ 250 attomol) is achieved using a band electrode comprised of a sparse network of pristine single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs), which covers <1% of the insulating substrate. The SWNT electrodes are deployed as amperometric (anodic) detectors in microfluidic cells, produced by microstereolithography, designed specifically for flow injection analysis (FIA). The flow cells, have a channel (duct) geometry, with cell height of 25 μm, and are shown to be hydrodynamically well-defined, with laminar Poiseuille flow. In the arrangement where solution continuously flows over the electrode but the electrode is only exposed to the analyte for short periods of time, the SWNT electrodes do not foul and can be used repeatedly for many months. The LOD for dopamine (DA), reported herein, is significantly lower than previous reports using FIA-electrochemical detection. Furthermore, the SWNT electrodes can be used as grown, i.e., they do not require chemical modification or cleanup. The extremely low background signals of the SWNT electrodes, as a consequence of the sparse surface coverage and the low intrinsic capacitance of the SWNTs, means that no signal processing is required to measure the low currents for DA oxidation at trace levels. DA detection in artificial cerebral fluid is also possible with a LOD of ∼50 pM in 50 μL (∼2.5 fmol).


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

In situ optimization of pH for parts-per-billion electrochemical detection of dissolved hydrogen sulfide using boron doped diamond flow electrodes.

Eleni Bitziou; Maxim B. Joseph; Tania L. Read; Nicola Palmer; Tim P. Mollart; Mark E. Newton; Julie V. Macpherson

A novel electrochemical approach to the direct detection of hydrogen sulfide (H2S), in aqueous solutions, covering a wide pH range (acid to alkali), is described. In brief, a dual band electrode device is employed, in a hydrodynamic flow cell, where the upstream electrode is used to controllably generate hydroxide ions (OH(-)), which flood the downstream detector electrode and provide the correct pH environment for complete conversion of H2S to the electrochemically detectable, sulfide (HS(-)) ion. All-diamond, coplanar conducting diamond band electrodes, insulated in diamond, were used due to their exceptional stability and robustness when applying extreme potentials, essential attributes for both local OH(-) generation via the reduction of water, and for in situ cleaning of the electrode, post oxidation of sulfide. Using a galvanostatic approach, it was demonstrated the pH locally could be modified by over five pH units, depending on the initial pH of the mobile phase and the applied current. Electrochemical detection limits of 13.6 ppb sulfide were achieved using flow injection amperometry. This approach which offers local control of the pH of the detector electrode in a solution, which is far from ideal for optimized detection of the analyte of interest, enhances the capabilities of online electrochemical detection systems.


Journal of Medical Engineering & Technology | 2011

Insights into 'fermentonomics': evaluation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in human disease using an electronic 'e-nose'.

Ramesh P. Arasaradnam; Nabil Quraishi; Iannos Kyrou; Chuka U. Nwokolo; Maxim B. Joseph; S. Kumar; Karna Dev Bardhan; James A. Covington

Detection of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is a common requirement in industry for which numerous methods are available. The electronic nose (e-nose) is an example. Rather than individual chemicals, the e-nose recognizes the ‘aroma fingerprint’ created by the collection of VOCs in samples, comparable to the human nose. We report on a novel application for gastrointestinal and metabolic medicine, and compare its results to mass spectrometry. Fermentation of undigested foods in the large bowel by its resident bacteria results in the creation of several chemicals including volatile gases that influence colonic and metabolic health. Using urine samples, preliminary results indicate the ability of the e-nose to distinguish between controls and those with inflammatory bowel disease or diabetes (separation rate of ∼97%). This emphasizes the different patterns of fermentation. Our term ‘fermentonomics’ describes the investigation and analysis of the fermentome by such non-invasive means. Such an approach has potentially wide application in medicine.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Electrochemical flow injection analysis of hydrazine in an excess of an active pharmaceutical ingredient: achieving pharmaceutical detection limits electrochemically.

Robert B. Channon; Maxim B. Joseph; Eleni Bitziou; Anthony W. T. Bristow; Andrew Ray; Julie V. Macpherson

The quantification of genotoxic impurities (GIs) such as hydrazine (HZ) is of critical importance in the pharmaceutical industry in order to uphold drug safety. HZ is a particularly intractable GI and its detection represents a significant technical challenge. Here, we present, for the first time, the use of electrochemical analysis to achieve the required detection limits by the pharmaceutical industry for the detection of HZ in the presence of a large excess of a common active pharmaceutical ingredient (API), acetaminophen (ACM) which itself is redox active, typical of many APIs. A flow injection analysis approach with electrochemical detection (FIA-EC) is utilized, in conjunction with a coplanar boron doped diamond (BDD) microband electrode, insulated in an insulating diamond platform for durability and integrated into a two piece flow cell. In order to separate the electrochemical signature for HZ such that it is not obscured by that of the ACM (present in excess), the BDD electrode is functionalized with Pt nanoparticles (NPs) to significantly shift the half wave potential for HZ oxidation to less positive potentials. Microstereolithography was used to fabricate flow cells with defined hydrodynamics which minimize dispersion of the analyte and optimize detection sensitivity. Importantly, the Pt NPs were shown to be stable under flow, and a limit of detection of 64.5 nM or 0.274 ppm for HZ with respect to the ACM, present in excess, was achieved. This represents the first electrochemical approach which surpasses the required detection limits set by the pharmaceutical industry for HZ detection in the presence of an API and paves the wave for online analysis and application to other GI and API systems.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

Fabrication Route for the Production of Coplanar, Diamond Insulated, Boron Doped Diamond Macro- and Microelectrodes of any Geometry

Maxim B. Joseph; Eleni Bitziou; Tania L. Read; Lingcong Meng; Nicola Palmer; Tim P. Mollart; Mark E. Newton; Julie V. Macpherson

Highly doped, boron doped diamond (BDD) is an electrode material with great potential, but the fabrication of suitable electrodes in a variety of different geometries both at the macro- and microscale, with an insulating material that does not compromise the material properties of the BDD, presents technical challenges. In this Technical Note, a novel solution to this problem is presented, resulting in the fabrication of coplanar macro- and microscale BDD electrodes, insulated by insulating diamond, at the single and multiple, individually addressable level. Using a laser micromachining approach, the required electrode(s) geometry is machined into an insulating diamond substrate, followed by overgrowth of high quality polycrystalline BDD (pBDD) and polishing to reveal approximately nanometer roughness, coplanar all-diamond structures. Electrical contacting is possible using both top and bottom contacts, where the latter are defined using the laser to produce non-diamond-carbon (NDC) in the vicinity of the back side of the BDD. We present the fabrication of individually addressable ring, band, and disk electrodes with minimum, reproducible controlled dimensions of 50 μm (limited only by the laser system employed). The pBDD grown into the insulating diamond recesses is shown to be free from NDC and possesses excellent electrochemical properties, in terms of extended solvent windows, electrochemical reversibility, and capacitance.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

In Situ Control of Local pH Using a Boron Doped Diamond Ring Disk Electrode: Optimizing Heavy Metal (Mercury) Detection

Tania L. Read; Eleni Bitziou; Maxim B. Joseph; Julie V. Macpherson

A novel electrochemical approach to modifying aqueous solution pH in the vicinity of a detector electrode in order to optimize the electrochemical measurement signal is described. A ring disk electrode was employed where electrochemical decomposition of water on the ring was used to generate a flux of protons which adjusts the local pH controllably and quantifiably at the disk. Boron doped diamond (BDD) functioned as the electrode material given the stability of this electrode surface especially when applying high potentials (to electrolyze water) for significant periods of time. A pH sensitive iridium oxide electrode electrodeposited on the disk electrode demonstrated that applied positive currents on the BDD ring, up to +50 μA, resulted in a local pH decrease of over 4 orders of magnitude, which remained stable over the measurement time of 600 s. pH generation experiments were found to be in close agreement with finite element simulations. The dual electrode arrangement was used to significantly improve the stripping peak signature for Hg in close to neutral conditions by the generation of pH = 2.0, locally. With the ability to create a localized pH change electrochemically in the vicinity of the detector electrode, this system could provide a simple method for optimized analysis at the source, e.g., river and sea waters.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2011

Dissolution Kinetics of Polycrystalline Calcium Sulfate-Based Materials: Influence of Chemical Modification

Robin D. Fisher; Michael E. Snowden; Maxim B. Joseph; James A. Covington; Patrick R. Unwin; Richard I. Walton

Using a channel flow cell (CFC) system, the dissolution kinetics of polycrystalline gypsum-based materials have been examined with the aim of understanding their interaction with water, a property that limits the applications of the material in many situations. ICP (inductively coupled plasma) analysis of elemental concentrations in solution as a function of time yields surface fluxes by using a finite element modeling approach to simulate the hydrodynamic behavior within the CFC. After correction for surface roughness, a value for the intrinsic dissolution flux into water of pure polycrystalline gypsum, CaSO(4).2H(2)O, of 1.1 (±0.4) × 10(-8) mol cm(-2) s(-1) has been obtained. The addition of known humid creep inhibitors to the gypsum samples, including boric acid, tartaric acid and 3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoic acid (gallic acid), was found to have little measurable effect on the dissolution kinetics of gypsum: all yielded dissolution fluxes of 1.4 (±0.6) × 10(-8) mol cm(-2) s(-1). However, trisodium trimetaphosphate (STMP) was found to have a small detectable inhibitory effect relative to pure gypsum yielding a flux of 7.4 (±2.0) × 10(-9) mol cm(-2) s(-1). The data strongly suggest that models for humid creep inhibition that involve dissolution-crystallization of gypsum crystallites are less likely than those that involve a hindered ingress of water into the gypsum matrix. For comparison, composite materials that comprised of calcium sulfate anhydrite (CaSO(4)) crystallites bound by a polyphosphate matrix were also studied. For some of these samples, Ca(2+) surface fluxes were observed to be ∼1 order of magnitude lower than values for polycrystalline gypsum control substrates, suggesting a useful way to impart water resistance to gypsum-based materials.


Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry | 2013

Dual electrode micro-channel flow cell for redox titrations: Kinetics and analysis of homogeneous ascorbic acid oxidation

Eleni Bitziou; Michael E. Snowden; Maxim B. Joseph; Simon J. Leigh; James A. Covington; Julie V. Macpherson; Patrick R. Unwin


Faraday Discussions | 2014

Laser heated boron doped diamond electrodes: effect of temperature on outer sphere electron transfer processes

Lingcong Meng; James G. Iacobini; Maxim B. Joseph; Julie V. Macpherson; Mark E. Newton


Carbon | 2017

Fabrication of a single sub-micron pore spanning a single crystal (100) diamond membrane and impact on particle translocation

Jennifer R. Webb; Aiden A. Martin; Robert P. Johnson; Maxim B. Joseph; Mark E. Newton; Igor Aharonovich; Milos Toth; Julie V. Macpherson

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