Abstract

Considering the importance of immobilizing dehydrogenase enzymes for bioelectronics, the focus of this paper is to obtain an enzymes cascade for ethanol bioelectrooxidation onto a carbon paper support using a hydrophobically-modified linear polymer of ethyleneimine (LPEI) as the immobilization matrix along with ethylene glycol diglycidyl ether (EGDGE) as the cross-linking agent. In the first stage of ethanol bioelectrooxidation, the biofuel cell tests show that the amount of the cross-linking agent employed in bioanode preparation directly affects their overall bioelectrocatalytic performance. In fact, much higher performance is observed for the bioanode prepared with an intermediate amount of cross-linking agent, reaching maximum current and power densities of respectively 12.5±1.4μWcm−2 and 150±17μAcm−2. In both the second and third steps of the ethanol oxidation cascade, several optimizations had to be performed in order to obtain a stable and functioning bioanode, but this work shows that the optimal crosslinking conditions are enzyme dependent. Although immobilization methodologies such as hydrogels have a wide application range in bioelectronics, the proportion between LPEI, EGDGE, and the enzymes being immobilized is quite important to obtain a functioning bioanode, particularly when a cascade of enzymes needs to be immobilized into this matrix.

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