posted on 2022-05-20, 18:08authored byMd Humayun Kabir, Erik Marquez, Grace Djokoto, Maurice Parker, Talia Weinstein, William Ghann, Jamal Uddin, Meser M. Ali, Maksudul M. Alam, Max Thompson, Altug S. Poyraz, Huggins Z. Msimanga, Mohammed M. Rahman, Michael Rulison, John Cramer
Harnessing
electrochemical energy in an engineered electrical circuit
from biochemical substrates in the human body using biofuel cells
is gaining increasing research attention in the current decade due
to the wide range of biomedical possibilities it creates for electronic
devices. In this report, we describe and characterize the construction
of just such an enzymatic biofuel cell (EBFC). It is simple, mediator-free,
and glucose-powered, employing only biocompatible materials. A novel
feature is the two-dimensional mesoporous thermally reduced graphene
oxide (rGO) host electrode. An additionally novelty is that we explored
the potential of using biocompatible, low-cost filter paper (FP) instead
of carbon paper, a conductive polymer, or gold as support for the
host electrode. Using glucose (C6H12O6) and molecular oxygen (O2) as the power-generating fuel,
the cell consists of a pair of bioelectrodes incorporating immobilized
enzymes, the bioanode modified by rGO–glucose oxidase (GOx/rGO),
and the biocathode modified by rGO–laccase (Lac/rGO). Scanning
electron microscopy/energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM/EDX),
transmission electron microscopy, and Raman spectroscopy techniques
have been employed to investigate the surface morphology, defects,
and chemical structure of rGO, GOx/rGO, and Lac/rGO. N2 sorption, SEM/EDX, and powder X-ray diffraction revealed a high
Brunauer–Emmett–Teller surface area (179 m2 g–1) mesoporous rGO structure with the high C/O
ratio of 80:1 as well. Results from the Fourier transform infrared
spectroscopy, UV–visible spectroscopy, and electrochemical
impedance spectroscopy studies indicated that GOx remained in its
native biochemical functional form upon being embedded onto the rGO
matrix. Cyclic voltammetry studies showed that the presence of mesoporous
rGO greatly enhanced the direct electrochemistry and electrocatalytic
properties of the GOx/rGO and Lac/rGO nanocomposites. The electron
transfer rate constant between GOx and rGO was estimated to be 2.14
s–1. The fabricated EBFC (GOx/rGO/FP-Lac/rGO/FP)
using a single GOx/rGO/FP bioanode and a single Lac/rGO/FP biocathode
provides a maximum power density (Pmax) of 4.0 nW cm–2 with an open-circuit voltage (VOC) of 0.04 V and remains stable for more than
15 days with a power output of ∼9.0 nW cm–2 at a pH of 7.4 under ambient conditions.