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- 2011 Annual Meeting
- Materials Engineering and Sciences Division
- Mesd Poster Session
- (618br) Electrically Conductive Polymers As Electrode Coatings for Entrapped Enzyme Biosensors
For such a biosensor to work reliably, a uniform and reproducible coating of conductive polymer must be laid down upon a base electrode, such as a carbon fiber. In this work, cyclic voltammetry is used to carry out the electropolymerization of monomers such as aniline and 8-anilino-1-napthalene sulphonic acid (PANSA). Uniformity of coating is assessed as a function of reaction conditions such as pH, catalyst, and monomer concentration. Such a coating process will ultimately be used to entrap substrate-sensing enzymes, thus providing the base platform for a enzyme-mediated single-use disposable biosensor.