Abstract
The utilisation of British Currency (GBP) as an electrode substrate is demonstrated for the first time. Termed Regal electrochemistry, a 5 pence (5p) coin (GBP) is electrically wired using a bespoke electrochemical cell and is electrochemically characterised using the outer-sphere redox probe hexaammineruthenium(iii) chloride. The electroanalytical utility of the 5p coin electrode is demonstrated towards the novel, proof-of-concept sensing of lead(ii) ions using square-wave voltammetry in model buffer solutions over the linear range 5-2000 nM exhibiting a limit of detection (3σ) of 1.97 nM. Interestingly, the actual cost of the electrode is 2.5 pence (GBP) since both sides of the coins can be utilised and provide a cheap yet reproducible and disposable metallic electrode substrate that is electrochemically useful.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Tan, F., Smith, J. P., Kampouris, D. K., Kamieniak, J., & Banks, C. E. (2015). Regal electrochemistry: British 5 pence coins provide useful metallic macroelectrode substrates. Analyst, 140(19), 6477–6480. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5an01218j
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