posted on 2007-10-25, 00:00authored byShah R. Ali, Rishi R. Parajuli, Yufeng Ma, Yetunde Balogun, Huixin He
The electrochemistry of a poly(anilineboronic acid)/carbon nanotube composite was studied in the presence
of dopamine and ascorbic acid. To understand the binding affinity of dopamine and ascorbic acid to the
boronic acid functional groups in the composite, the association constants between the diol groups in dopamine
and ascorbic acid and the boronic acid were experimentally determined using a fluorescence-based binding
assay. The results demonstrate that ascorbic acid could severely interfere with the detection of dopamine in
nonoxidative boronic acid-binding approaches: Ascorbic acid was able to electrocatalytically reduce the fully
oxidized polyaniline backbone during the electrochemical oxidation process; similarly to dopamine, ascorbic
acid was also able to bind to the boronic acid groups through its planar diol group even though the binding
affinity is much lower. The examination of the dopamine transduction mechanism and ascorbic acid interference
mechanism in this nonoxidative approach will benefit the design of future boronic acid-based sensors.