Copper(II) polyphthalocyanine (CuPPc) was combined with graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) to form a heterojunction with enhanced photoelectrochemical (PEC) signal. A sensitive PEC method was developed for determination of ractopamine based on aPEC inner filter effect between gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) and the g-C3N4/CuPPc. A gold electrode was modified with g-C3N4/CuPPc and the DNA was linked to the AuNPs. Initially, the PEC signal is weak due to the inner filter effect between the AuNPs and g-C3N4/CuPPc. In the presence of ractopamine, it interacts with the aptamer and the complementary chain (C chain) is released. This triggers the entropy-driven cyclic amplificationand results in the release of the substrate B chain (SB chain) from three-dimensional DNA stabilizer. The probe is released from the electrode due to the interaction of probe DNA and the SB chain. As a result, the PEC signal increases linearly in the 0.1pmol·L-1 to 1000pmol·L-1 ractopamine concentration range. The detection limit is 0.03 pM, and the relative standard deviation is 3.4% (at a 10pmol·L-1level; for n = 11). The method has been successfully applied to the determination of ractopamine in pork samples. Graphical abstract Schematic presentation of detection method based on PEC inner filter effect between AuNPs and the g-C3N4/CuPPc being fabricated for ractopamine. 3D DNA was used as stabilizer to decrease the PEC blank signal.