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1.
Chem Rev ; 2024 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39018111

ABSTRACT

Making a measurement over millions of nanoparticles or exposed crystal facets seldom reports on reactivity of a single nanoparticle or facet, which may depart drastically from ensemble measurements. Within the past 30 years, science has moved toward studying the reactivity of single atoms, molecules, and nanoparticles, one at a time. This shift has been fueled by the realization that everything changes at the nanoscale, especially important industrially relevant properties like those important to electrocatalysis. Studying single nanoscale entities, however, is not trivial and has required the development of new measurement tools. This review explores a tale of the clever use of old and new measurement tools to study electrocatalysis at the single entity level. We explore in detail the complex interrelationship between measurement method, electrocatalytic material, and reaction of interest (e.g., carbon dioxide reduction, oxygen reduction, hydrazine oxidation, etc.). We end with our perspective on the future of single entity electrocatalysis with a key focus on what types of measurements present the greatest opportunity for fundamental discovery.

2.
Anal Chem ; 96(26): 10648-10653, 2024 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38896456

ABSTRACT

Fentanyl is an extremely potent opioid that is commonly laced into other drugs. Fentanyl poses a danger to users but also to responders or bystanders who may unknowingly ingest a lethal dose (∼2 mg) of fentanyl from aerosolized powder or vapor. Electrochemistry offers a small, simple, and affordable platform for the direct detection of illicit substances; however, it is largely limited to solution-phase measurements. Here, we demonstrate the hands-free capture and electroanalyzation of aerosols containing fentanyl. A novel electrochemical cell is constructed by a microwire (cylindrical working electrode) traversing an ionic liquid film that is suspended within a conductive loop (reference/counter electrode). We provide a quantitative finite element simulation of the resulting electrochemical system. The suspended film maintains a high-surface area:volume, allowing the electrochemical cell to act as an effective aerosol collector. The low vapor pressure (negligible evaporation) of ionic liquid makes it a robust candidate for in-field applications, and the use of a hydrophobic ionic liquid allows for the extraction of fentanyl from solids and sprayed aqueous aerosols.


Subject(s)
Aerosols , Electrochemical Techniques , Fentanyl , Fentanyl/analysis , Aerosols/chemistry , Aerosols/analysis , Ionic Liquids/chemistry , Electrodes , Analgesics, Opioid/analysis
3.
Analyst ; 149(7): 2180-2189, 2024 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38426542

ABSTRACT

New electrochemical probes offer the opportunity to investigate new systems. A dual barrel electrode can be laser pulled to produce micron-sized platinum disk electrodes. Here, we detail several important considerations for both the fabrication process and for experimental implimentation of the probe. We provide parameters for a Sutter P-2000 laser puller, methods for optical and electrochemical characterization, tips for how to successfully bevel the microelectrodes, and how salt concentrations and electrostatic discharge affect the voltammetry. This paper serves as a guide for how to successfully implement dual barrel electrodes from fabrication to experimentation.

4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(12): e2321064121, 2024 Mar 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38466847

ABSTRACT

Recent reports have detailed the striking observation that electroactive molecules, such as hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and radical water species (H2O.+/H2O.-), are spontaneously produced in aqueous microdroplets. Stochastic electrochemistry allows one to study reactions in real-time occurring inside subfemtoliter droplets, one droplet at a time, when a microdroplet irreversibly adsorbs to an ultramicroelectrode surface (radius ~ 5 µm). Here, we use stochastic electrochemistry to probe the formation of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in single aqueous microdroplets suspended in 1,2-dichloroethane. The oxidation of H2O2 at alkaline pH (11.5) differs from near-neutral conditions (6.4), allowing us to create a digital, turn-off sensing modality for the presence of H2O2. Further, we show that the stochastic electrochemical signal is highest at the mass transfer limitation of the H2O2 couple and is dampened when the potential nears the formal potential. We validate these results by showing that the addition of a H2O2 selective probe, luminol, decreases the stochastic electrochemical response at alkaline pH (11.5). Our results support the observation that H2O2 is generated in water microdroplets at concentrations of ~100 s of µM.

5.
Small ; 20(28): e2308637, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38327152

ABSTRACT

Liquid aerosols are ubiquitous in nature, and several tools exist to quantify their physicochemical properties. As a measurement science technique, electrochemistry has not played a large role in aerosol analysis because electrochemistry in air is rather difficult. Here, a remarkably simple method is demonstrated to capture and electroanalyze single liquid aerosol particles with radii on the order of single micrometers. An electrochemical cell is constructed by a microwire (cylindrical working electrode) traversing a film of ionic liquid (1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide) that is suspended within a wire loop (reference/counter electrode). An ionic liquid is chosen because the low vapor pressure preserves the film over weeks, vastly improving suspended film electroanalysis. The resultant high surface area allows the suspended ionic liquid cell to act as an aerosol net. Given the hydrophobic nature of the ionic liquid, aqueous aerosol particles do not coalesce into the film. When the liquid aerosols collide with the sufficiently biased microwire (creating a complex boundary: aerosol|wire|ionic liquid|air), the electrochemistry within a single liquid aerosol particle can be interrogated in real-time. The ability to achieve liquid aerosol size distributions for aerosols over 1 µm in radius is demonstrated.

6.
Anal Chem ; 2024 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38316404

ABSTRACT

Chemical reactions that occur in droplets proceed much differently compared to bulk phases. For instance, many groups have studied droplets during levitation by mass spectrometry and fluorescence to gain more detailed mechanistic insight. Such droplets maximize the probability of solution species interacting with the solution-air interface, an interface that is inherently difficult to probe electrochemically. In this Technical Note, we overcome this limitation by developing a laser-pulled dual-barrel electrode. Having two microwires sealed within the same glass capillary allows one to make two-electrode measurements. We show that the electrode can be positioned within a levitating water droplet and that the voltammetry of a redox indicator (hexacyanoferrate (II/III)) can be observed in real-time. Such foundational measurement tools are important to probe a variety of chemical reactions at complex interfaces.

7.
Anal Chem ; 94(37): 12638-12644, 2022 09 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36066582

ABSTRACT

Cocaine is one of the most commonly trafficked and abused drugs in the United States, and deployable field tests are important for rapid identification in nonlaboratory settings. At present, colorimetric tests exist for in-field determination, but these fundamentally suffer from interferent effects. Cocaine is an organic salt that is readily water soluble as a cation and almost insoluble in the deprotonated neutral form. Here, we take advantage of the electrochemical window of water to increase the pH at the electrode surface by driving water reduction, effectively electroprecipitating the cocaine base. The precipitate on the electrode surface is then electrochemically oxidized by a voltammetric sweep through sufficiently positive potentials. We demonstrate excellent selectivity to cocaine compared to common adulterants, such as procaine, lidocaine, benzocaine, caffeine, and levamisole. Finally, we detect cocaine on a carbon fiber microelectrode, demonstrating miniaturizability and allowing access to low-resistance media (e.g., tap water).


Subject(s)
Cocaine , Benzocaine , Caffeine , Carbon Fiber , Levamisole , Lidocaine , Powders , Procaine , Water
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