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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Microheterogeneous electrocatalytic chiral recognition at monoclinic vanadium-doped zirconias: enantioselective detection of glucose.
Javier AlarcónAnd Antonio Doménechsubject
Aqueous solutionMolecular StructureChemistryInorganic chemistryVanadiumchemistry.chemical_elementElectronsStereoisomerismVanadiumElectrocatalystTin oxideElectrochemistryCatalysisAnalytical ChemistryCatalysisGlucoseMicroscopy Electron TransmissionCalibrationElectrochemistryMicroscopy Electron ScanningCubic zirconiaZirconiumOxidation-ReductionMonoclinic crystal systemdescription
Synthetic tetragonal and monoclinic vanadium-doped zirconias (t- and m-VxZr1-xO2, 0.005x0.150) exert an effective catalytic effect toward the electrochemical oxidation of glucose in aqueous alkaline media. The catalytic effect of monoclinic specimens attached to carbon and fluorine-doped tin oxide electrodes exhibits a remarkable enantioselectivity, so that catalytic currents for the oxidation of L-glucose at +0.92 V vs AgCl/Ag are considerably larger than those obtained for the oxidation of D-glucose. This enantioselectivity can be associated with the existence of a noncentrosymmetric coordination of vanadium centers in the monoclinic crystalline form of zirconia. From the electrochemical results, it can be suggested that the electrocatalytic mechanism includes the formation of glucose-vanadium surface adducts and electron transfer between catalytic centers and the substrate. The interference from chloride ions in the electrocatalytic process is significantly decreased by covering the zirconia particles with a layer of amorphous silica. These results propose that incorporation of catalytically active centers into nonsentrosymmetric sites of inorganic crystalline materials can be taken as a plausible strategy for chiral recognition via electrocatalysis.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2007-07-28 | Analytical chemistry |