Abstract:
The analysis of biomolecules and drugs has great importance in medical science and in the
pharmaceutical industries. In both the cases accuracy is the main factor, which can affect the health
of living mankind. From the previous literature, it has been concluded that small concentration of
biomolecules and drugs is responsible to regulate the various biological activities. Any imbalance
in their concentration can disturb the human physiological system, which leads to various serious
diseases. Therefore, rapid, sensitive and highly selective methods are needed for the selective
determination of biomolecules and drugs in clinical diagnosis and quantification of drugs in
pharmaceutical analysis. Voltammetric sensors have many advantages in term of excellent
sensitivity and selectivity for the determination of electro-active biomolecules, drugs, organic
compounds and inorganic compounds. As a result of this, several unmodified and modified
voltammetric sensors have been developed for the analysis of the trace amount of biologically
significant biomolecules and drugs.
In the present thesis, various voltammetric sensors have been fabricated, characterized and
used for the determination of biomolecules and drugs. The fabrication, characterization, behavior,
results and applications of these sensors are summarized into five chapters.
The first chapter of the thesis is ―General Introduction‖. It describes important aspects of
electrochemical, voltammetric techniques, conventional electrodes, types of surface modifiers and
analytes of interest. This chapter also presents the methodology applied in the present studies.
The second chapter describes the fabrication of unmodified and nanopalladium grained
polymer nanocomposite based sensors for the sensitive determination of a biomolecule, Melatonin
(MEL) in human biological samples and pharmaceutical samples. This chapter has been divided
into two sections. In the first section, the unmodified glassy carbon sensor is employed for the
determination of MEL using cyclic voltammetry (CV) and square wave voltammetry (SWV).
Irreversible oxidation of MEL was found to proceed through an adsorption controlled pathway at
the surface of glassy carbon. The quantitative estimation of MEL was performed using SWV in a
linear concentration range of 5–200 μM with a sensitivity of 0.0491 μM/μA and a limit of
detection of 0.3432 μM was observed. The proposed protocol was also applied for determining
MEL content in pharmaceutical samples and recovery studies in human urine samples were also
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performed. The observed results demonstrated a good agreement with the stated values. In the
second section, the electrocatalytic properties of the palladium nanoparticles based polymer
nanocomposite towards sensing of MEL are presented. The modification protocol involved a
single step fabrication and was achieved using CV. The sensing surface was characterized using
voltammetry, Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscopy (FE-SEM), Energy dispersive X-ray
analysis (EDX) and Electron Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS). Quantitative estimation of MEL has
also been carried out using SWV in the linear concentration range of 5–100 μM and sensitivity and
limit of detection of 0.1235 μA/μM and 0.09 μM respectively have been achieved. The surface
modified sensor exhibited almost 3 fold improvement in the sensing properties in comparison to
the unmodified surface. The proposed method was also successfully extended for the
determination of MEL in commercially available pharmaceutical formulations and human urine
samples.
The third chapter of the thesis presents the development of melamine based molecularly
imprinted, palladium nanoparticles decorated multi-walled carbon nanotubes and silver
nanoparticles decorated graphene nanorribon modified sensor for the determination of
biomolecules. For the sake of clarity, this chapter has been divided into three sections. The first
section, describes a sensitive and facile molecularly imprinted sensor for the determination of 8-
hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), an important oxidative DNA damage product. The
molecularly imprinted polymer film was fabricated by electropolymerization of melamine in the
presence of 8-OHdG, on glutaraldehyde/poly-1,5-diaminonaphthalene modified edge plane
pyrolytic graphite (EPPG) surface. The imprinted sensor surface was characterized by using FESEM,
EIS, CV, SWV and UV-visible spectroscopy. The calibration response was linear over a
concentration range of 0.020–3 μM for 8-OHdG with sensitivity and limit of detection (3σ/b) as
10.59 μM/μA and 3 nM respectively. The common metabolites in urine, like uric acid, ascorbic
acid, xanthine and hypoxanthine did not interfere up to 100-fold concentration. The imprinted
sensor is also successfully employed for the determination of 8-OHdG in human urine sample of a
renal failure patient. The second section, deals with the nano palladium decorated multi walled
carbon nanotubes (PdNP:MWCNT) modified sensor for the determination of 5-
hydroxytryptophan, an important serotonin (5-HT) precursor. PdNP:MWCNT was synthesized in a
simple single step, followed by the characterization using FE-SEM, EDX, Film-X-ray diffraction
(XRD), EIS and voltammetry. The PdNP:MWCNT was then used for the surface modification of
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glassy carbon electrode (GCE) and applied for the electrochemical analysis of 5-
hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP), a serotonin precursor. A significant increment in the peak current
response was observed and peak potential also shifted towards less positive potentials indicating
the facilitated oxidation process at PdNP:MWCNT/GCE. The quantitative determination of 5-HTP
was carried out by using SWV and the anodic peak current was found to increase with increasing
5-HTP concentration in the linear range of 2–400 μM with a sensitivity and limit of detection of
0.2122 μA/μM and 77 nM respectively. The fabricated sensor further displayed excellent
selectivity for 5-HTP in the presence of major interfering biomolecules in the urine with excellent
recovery. The third section, of this chapter demonstrates the simple, rapid and sensitive
voltammetric sensor for the determination of histamine (HTM); a neurotransmitter. The graphene
nanoribbons were prepared by chemical method and silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) were prepared
by the reduction of silver nitrate. The composite of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) and AgNPs was
drop casted on the surface of EPPG and the GNRs-AgNP exhibited superior catalytic activity
towards the oxidation of HTM. To characterize the modified surface film-XRD, EDX, Raman
Spectroscopy, Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM), High Resolution Transmission Electron
Microscopy (HRTEM), FE-SEM, EIS and CV have been used. The SWV has been used for the
quantitative analysis of HTM and the GNRs-AgNP modified sensor demonstrated a linear
calibration plot in the concentration range of 1–500 μM with sensitivity 0.158 μA/μM and the limit
of the detection was found to be 0.049 μM. The GNRs-AgNPs sensor was highly selective in the
presence of common interfering compounds present in biological fluids. The good recoveries (>
99%) were found in blood plasma samples. The determination of HTM was carried out in red wine
by using standard addition method and the results were validated by using HPLC. The proposed
sensor can be effectively applied for the determination of HTM in real samples.
The fourth chapter deals with the fabrication of a gold-palladium nanoparticles decorated
electrochemically reduced graphene oxide (AuNP-PdNP-ErGO) modified glassy carbon sensor for
the individual and simultaneous determination of lomefloxacin (LMF) and amoxicillin (AMX). A
new sensing platform exploiting the beneficial interaction of gold, palladium and ErGO has been
prepared involving a one-step electrochemical process, and is characterized using FE-SEM,
Elemental Mapping, TEM, Raman Spectroscopy, film-XRD and EIS. The calibration curves for
LMF and AMX have been constructed using square wave voltammetry and exhibited a linear
response in the concentration range of 4–500 μM and 30–350 μM respectively. The sensitivity and
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limit of detection were 0.0773 μA/μM and 81 nM; 0.0376 μA/μM and 9 μM for LMF and AMX
respectively. The proposed protocol was successfully applied for detecting the presence of LMF
and AMX in the complex matrix like urine and in the solutions containing excess of potentially
interfering substances like ascorbic acid, uric acid, hypoxanthine etc.
The fifth chapter is divided into two sections, first section describes a simple, facile and
sensitive method for the fabrication of molecularly imprinted sensor for the determination of
hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ). The sensor is fabricated by the deposition of iron oxide nanoparticles
followed by the electropolymerization of melamine monomer in the presence of HCTZ at the
surface of EPPG. The surface of the imprinted sensor was characterized by using FE-SEM, EDX,
EIS, film-XRD, CV and SWV. The oxidation of HCTZ occurred in a single, well-defined peak and
the peak current was dependent on the concentration of HCTZ in the range 0.025–10 μM. The
sensitivity and limit of detection (3σ/b) were found to be 2.342 μM/μA and 4 nM respectively. The
proposed method was applied for the determination of HCTZ in the presence of common
metabolites present in the human system. The obtained results indicated that uric acid, ascorbic
acid, hypoxanthine and xanthine did not interfere up to 100 fold concentration. The imprinted
sensor was successfully applied for the determination of HCTZ in real samples. The second
section of this chapter deals with a simple, facile, selective and cost effective electrochemical
method for the determination of telmisartan (TMS); a drug used for the treatment of hypertension.
A sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) modified EPPG is prepared by the simple immersion of EPPG in
SDS solution at concentration greater than critical micelle concentration (CMC). The modified
sensor exhibited superior sensing properties towards the oxidation of TMS. The modified surface
was characterized by using the EDX, FE-SEM, EIS and CV. The quantitative investigations of the
TMS were performed by applying the SWV. The micelles of SDS form a pseudo complex with
cation radical of TMS and catalyse the oxidation. The proposed sensor showed the linear
calibration plot in the concentration range of 5–100 μM with sensitivity 0.2983 μA/μM and limit of
the detection 0.082 μM. The specificity of the developed sensor was also evaluated in the presence
of commonly present interfering substances in biological samples. The amount of TMS excreted in
urine of the patients undergoing treatment has also been determined. The proposed method can be
effectively applied for the investigation of TMS in pharmaceutical formulations and biological
samples.