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e-Article

Sensitive Voltammetric Detection of Chloroquine Drug by Applying a Boron-Doped Diamond Electrode
Document Type
article
Source
C, Vol 6, Iss 4, p 75 (2020)
Subject
chloroquine
square-wave voltammetry
boron-doped diamond
electroanalysis
pharmaceutics
Organic chemistry
QD241-441
Language
English
ISSN
2311-5629
Abstract
In this research, a boron-doped diamond (BDD) electrode has been explored to detect the chloroquine drug. The electrochemical performance of BDD electrode towards the irreversible anodic response of chloroquine was investigated by subjecting this electrode to the cathodic (−0.5 A cm−2 by 180 s, generating a predominantly hydrogen-terminated surface) and anodic (+0.5 A cm−2 by 30 s, oxygen-terminated surface) pretreatments. The cathodically pretreated BDD electrode ensured a better-defined anodic peak and higher current intensity. Thus, by applying the cathodically pretreated BDD electrode and square-wave voltammetry (SWV), the analytical curve was linear from 0.01 to 0.25 µmol L−1 (correlation coefficient of 0.994), with sensitivity and limit of detection of 12.2 µA L µmol−1 and 2.0 nmol−1, respectively. This nanomolar limit of detection is the lowest recorded so far with modified and unmodified electrodes.