Abstract

Conductive boron-doped chemical vapor-deposited diamond thin films, already known to have superior properties for general electroanalysis, including low background current and a wide potential window, are here shown to have additional advantages with respect to electrochemical oxidation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH), including high resistance to deactivation and insensitivity to dissolved oxygen. Cyclic voltammetry, amperometry, and the rotating disk electrode technique were used to study the reaction in neutral pH solution. Highly reproducible cyclic voltammograms for NADH oxidation were obtained at as-deposited diamond electrodes. The response was stable over several months of storage in ambient air, in contrast to glassy carbon electrodes, which deactivated within 1 h. The diamond electrode exhibited very high sensitivity for NADH, with an amperometric detection limit of 10 nM (S/N = 7). The response remained stable, even in the very low concentration range, for several months. In addition, interference effects due to ascorbic acid were minimal when the concentrations of NADH and ascorbic acid were comparable. An NADH-mediated dehydrogenese-based ethanol biosensor incorporating an unmodified diamond electrode is demonstrated. The present results indicate that diamond is a useful electrode material for the analytical detection of NADH, making it attractive for use in sensors based on enzyme-catalyzed reactions involving NADH as a cofactor.

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