Enhancing Electrogenerated Chemiluminescence on Platinum Electrodes through Surface Modification

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Abstract

Increasing the light emission of electrogenerated chemiluminescence is an important goal for enhancing the sensitivity for potential practical applications. Electrogenerated chemiluminescence is primarily triggered by a heterogeneous electron transfer reaction, for which the electrode material plays a pivotal role. We investigated how a platinum electrode, one of the most used but poorly efficient noble metal electrode materials in electrogenerated chemiluminescence, can be modified to enhance light emission. A polypyrrole layer was deposited on the platinum electrode through electrochemically induced polymerization, and subsequently pyrolyzed with the formation of a carbonaceous film. Electrochemiluminescence of the [Ru(bpy)3]2+/tri-n-propylamine system on such carbon film electrodes showed an enhancement of up to a 4 times increase, as compared with the bare platinum electrode.

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Fiorani, A., Eßmann, V., Santos, C. S., & Schuhmann, W. (2020). Enhancing Electrogenerated Chemiluminescence on Platinum Electrodes through Surface Modification. ChemElectroChem, 7(5), 1256–1260. https://doi.org/10.1002/celc.202000103

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