3 research outputs found
Phase Behavior and Proton Conduction in Poly(vinylphosphonic acid)/Poly(ethylene oxide) Blends
The miscibility of poly(vinylphosphonic acid) (PVPA) and poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) is studied for the first time in this work, and a miscibility diagram is obtained based on thermoanalytical (DSC) and optical microscopy data. On the basis of this knowledge, homogeneous PVPA/PEO blends are prepared as proton-conducting polymer films. The mobility of phosphonic acid groups and PEO in the blends is determined by 1H-MAS NMR in temperature-dependent measurements. The effect of composition and the role of PEO on proton conduction are discussed
Enzyme-Labeled Pt@BSA Nanocomposite as a Facile Electrochemical Biosensing Interface for Sensitive Glucose Determination
Electrocatalytic
reactions of glucose oxidation based on enzyme-labeled electrochemical
biosensors demand a high enzymatic activity and fast electron transfer
property to produce the amplified signal response. Through a “green”
synthesis method, Pt@BSA nanocomposite was prepared as a biosensing
interface for the first time. Herein we presented a convenient and
effective glucose sensing matrix based on Pt@BSA nanocomposite along
with the covalent adsorption of glucose oxidase (GOD). The electrocatalytic
activity toward oxygen reduction was significantly enhanced due to
the excellent bioactivity of anchored GOD and superior catalytic performance
of interior platinum nanoparticles, which was gradually restrained
with the addition of glucose. A sensitive glucose biosensor was then
successfully developed upon the restrained oxygen reduction peak current.
Differential pulse voltammetry (DPV) was employed to investigate the
determination performance of the enzyme biosensor, resulting in a
linear response range from 0.05 to 12.05 mM with an optimal detection
limit of 0.015 mM. The as-proposed sensing technique revealed high
selectivity against endogenous interfering species, satisfactory storage
stability, acceptable durability, and favorable fabrication reproducibility
with the RSD of 3.8%. During the practical application in human blood
serum samples, this glucose biosensor obtained a good detection accuracy
of analytical recoveries within 97.5 to 104.0%, providing an alternative
scheme for glucose level assay in clinical application
Self-Assembled Construction of Ion-Selective Nanobarriers in Electrolyte Membranes for Redox Flow Batteries
Ion-conducting
membranes (ICMs) with high selectivity are important
components in redox flow batteries. However it is still a challenge
to break the trade-off between ion conductivity and ion selectivity,
which can be resolved by the regulation of their nanostructures. Here,
polyoxometalate (POM)-hybridized block copolymers (BCPs) are used
as self-assembled additives to construct proton-selective nanobarriers
in the ICM matrix to improve the microscopic structures and macroscopic
properties of ICMs. Benefiting from the co-assembly behavior of BCPs
and POMs and their cooperative noncovalent interactions with the polymer
matrix, ∼50 nm ellipsoidal functional nanoassemblies with hydrophobic
vanadium-shielding cores and hydrophilic proton-conducting shells
are constructed in the sulfonated poly(ether ether ketone) matrix,
which leads to an overall enhancement of proton conductivity, proton
selectivity, and cell performance. These results present a self-assembly
route to construct functional nanostructures for the modification
of polymer electrolyte membranes toward emerging energy technologies
