Abstract

The electrocatalytic reduction of H 2O 2 was studied for carbonaceous electrodes modified with horse-radish peroxidase (HRP), microperoxidase (MP), and lactoperoxidase (LP). The carbonaceous electrodes were of three different graphites, carbon and glassy carbon. The peroxidase modified electrode was inserted as the working electrode in a flow through amperometric cell of the wall jet type and connected to a flow injection system. The effect of different pretreatments of the electrode surface prior to adsorption of the enzyme was investigated. Heating the electrodes in a muffle furnace at 700°C for 1.5 min was found to yield the highest currents. The electrocatalytic current for HRP-modified electrodes starts at about +600 mV vs. Ag/AgCl (pH 7.0) and reaches a maximum value at about −200 mV. For MP- and LP-modified electrodes the currents start at a lower potential (≈ 300 mV). For the best electrode material for HRP, straight calibration curves were obtained between 1 and 500 μM H 2O 2 at 0 mV. The mechanism for the electron transfer from the electrode to the adsorbed peroxidase is discussed. Deliberate modification of the electrode surface with quinoid type electroactive species was found to mediate the reaction. It is proposed that spontaneously occurring electrochemically active surface groups mediate the electron transfer to the adsorbed enzyme. However, a contribution to the observed current from a direct electron transfer cannot be ruled out.

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