In traditional luminol electrochemiluminescence (ECL) systems, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and dissolved oxygen (DO) are the commonly used coreactants to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) for ECL emission. However, the self-decomposition of hydrogen peroxide and the limited solubility and content of oxygen in solution undoubtedly restrict the luminescence efficiency and stability of the luminol ECL system. Inspired by the ROS-mediated ECL mechanism, we pioneered hydroxide ion as an advanced luminol ECL coreactant using nickel-doped and carbon nanotube-modified tungsten oxide (Ni-WOx-CNT) as the coreactant accelerator. Owing to the excellent catalytic activity of Ni-WOx-CNT, amounts of ROS were generated from OH- at a low excitation voltage, which subsequently reacted with luminol anion radicals and triggered intense ECL signals. Experiments confirmed an impressive ECL behavior in terms of high luminescent intensity (85,563 a.u.) and super stability over 1300 consecutive tests; both are superior to those recently reported luminol-H2O2 and luminol-DO systems with smaller ECL intensities and consecutive tests less than 25 times. To validate the feasibility and versatility of the developed system in sensor, traditional three-electrodes system and closed bipolar electrodes system with various sensing strategies of direct oxidation, "gate-effect" of molecularly imprinted polymer, immune reaction, and enzyme-catalyzed reaction were proposed to monitor uric acid (UA), C-reactive protein (CRP), immunoglobulin G (IgG), and glucose (Glu). The superior sensing performances confirmed the great application potential of the developed ROS-mediated ECL system.
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