Self-Assembled Regenerated Cellulose Spacer Film in Thin Film and Generator-Collector Electrodes

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Abstract

Reconstituted cellulose spontaneously self-assembles at surfaces from an alkaline cellulose solution (ca. 1wt%, pH14, prepared with an enzymatic method from wood pulp) into porous films with approximately 300nm thickness per layer, for example onto immersed tin-doped indium oxide (ITO) electrodes. Sequential multi-layer deposition allows control over the thickness of the assembled films. The hydrophilic properties of the cellulose film electrodes are utilised here (i) as dip-probe with capillary force picking up sample solution and (ii) as flow-through generator-collector probe, for example for future application in in situ chromatographic separation in end-column detection with nano-molar sensitivity. © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

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Vuorema, A., Sillanpää, M., Vehviläinen, M., Kamppuri, T., Nousiainen, P., Thielemans, W., & Marken, F. (2013). Self-Assembled Regenerated Cellulose Spacer Film in Thin Film and Generator-Collector Electrodes. Electroanalysis, 25(7), 1773–1779. https://doi.org/10.1002/elan.201300141

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