Development and characterisation of microelectrode and nanoelectrode systems
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Authors
Woodvine, Helena Louise
Abstract
Micro- and nano-electrodes have distinct advantages over large electrodes,
including their decreased iR drop and enhanced mass transport due to radial
diffusion characteristics which leads to the ready establishment of a steady state
(or near steady-state) signal without convection. This enhanced mass transport
also leads to increased current densities and signal to noise ratios. However,
there is a need for fabrication techniques which reproducibly give micro- and
nano-electrodes of controlled size and shape. The optimisation of systematic
arrays on the nano-scale, open up possibilities for developing highly sensitive
electrode devices, for use in physical chemistry and the determination of fast
electrode kinetics and rates of reaction, as well as to provide highly sensitive
electroanalytical devices, able to detect very low concentrations of substrates.
This thesis first presents work involving the fabrication and
characterisation on silicon substrates of square platinum microelectrodes.
There is already an established theory for the behaviour of microdisc electrodes
however, it is easier to make microsquares reproducibly using pixellated
photomasks. The voltammetric and ac impedance characteristics of these
electrodes in background electrolyte and in the presence of ferri/ferrocyanide
redox couple are presented and the response is theoretically analysed. A
combination of computer simulation, theory and experimentation show that
these electrodes have increased current densities (14% greater) compared with
a microdisc of equivalent radius and an alternative theoretical expression is
presented to calculate the limiting current of microsquares at all dimensions.
This thesis then discusses the development and optimisation of novel
nano-band cavity array electrodes (CaviArE), using standard photo-microlithographic
techniques. The resulting architecture encloses a Platinum
nanoband of 50 nm width within each array element that is positioned half way
up the vertical edges of shallow square cavities (depressions), with a total depth
of 1050 nm. The width of the square cavity and the separation of the array elements can be controlled and systematically altered, with great accuracy. The CaviArE devices are shown to give quantitative pseudo-steady-state
responses characteristic of multiple nanobands, whilst passing overall currents
consistent with a macroelectrode. The array has a much enhanced signal-tonoise
ratio compared with an equivalent microsquare array, as it has 0.167% of
the area and is therefore markedly less affected by non-Faradaic currents, while
it passes comparable Faradaic currents. At high sweep rates the response is
also virtually unaffected by solution stirring. The impedammetric
characteristics presented show different diffusional regimes at high, medium
and low frequencies, associated with diffusion within individual square cavities,
outside of the cavity and finally across the whole array as the diffusional fields
of the neighbouring array elements overlap. Justification and fitting of
equivalent circuits to these frequency regions provide details about the charge
transfer, capacitance and diffusional processes occurring. The results show that
these systems are highly sensitive to surface transfer effects and a rate constant
for ferricyanide of 1.99 cm s-1 was observed, suggesting fast kinetic processes
can be detected. Together, these characteristics make nanoband electrode
arrays, with this architecture, of real interest for sensitive electroanalytical
applications, and development of devices for industrial application is currently
being undertaken.
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