News from the ACS National Meeting: Climbing an electron staircase

Jun 1, 2011 - News from the ACS National Meeting: Climbing an electron staircase. Celia Henry reports from San Francisco. Celia Henry. Anal. Chemi...
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lulosefilm.A 14-ug/mL IgG solution was placed directly on thefilm,and unbound antibody was rinsed away. The probe was then immersed in H20 or plasma solutions containing SNX-III acetate (an a>conotoxin), which is a 25 amino acid peptide. The detection limit for the method is 0.2 fmol/uLfor H20 solution; the detection limit for plasma solution is still under investigation. They said that the time-consuming covalent immobilization procedure limits the use of on-probe immunoassay for real applications; however, the nitrocellulose film provides a simple and efficient approach to on-probe immobilization. The nitrocellulosefilmfacilitates the analysis of complex biological solutions, because the suppression effect is reduced relative to a bare probe tip. Direct extraction from solution also helps to overcome the suppression effect and concentrates the analyte on the probe.

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Climbing an electron staircase Single-molecule detection has attracted great interest recently, and single-molecule electrochemistry is no exception. The usual vision of a voltammogram is as a smooth continuum, but small enough electrodes make it possible to watch the effects of single electrons. Allen J. Bard and Fu-Ren Fan of the University of Texas at Austin have observed a coulomb staircase in which each step is the result of a single electron. They used nanometer-scale electrodes that acted as faradaic capacitors. Because the electrodes were so small, the charge for each additional electron represented a voltage change of ~ 0.1 V, which could easily be observed. Bard says that the steps were smeared somewhat by thermal effects, because the experiments were conducted at room temperature rather than at liquid helium temperatures. The derivative of the coulomb staircase yielded regularly spaced maxima, substantiating the fact that each step was the result of the addition of a single electron. Larger electrodes did not display the staircase effect. In a separate experiment they injected charge into the electrode and observed the relaxation back to equilibrium. With a 10-um electrode, they observed a smooth decay, whereas with a 17-nm electrode the current-time curve showed discrete steps as it relaxed back to equilibrium. Bard says that it is still too early to know whether this method will eventually have use as an analytical technique.

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