Development of Au Disk Nanoelectrode Down to 3 nm
in Radius for Detection of Dopamine Release from a Single Cell
Posted on 2015-06-02 - 00:00
A Au disk nanoelectrode down to 3
nm in radius was developed by
a facile and reliable method and successfully applied for monitoring
dopamine release from single living vesicles. A fine etched Au wire
was coated with cathodic electrophoretic paint followed by polyimide,
which retracted from the tip end during curing to expose the Au nanotip.
By cyclic voltammetric scanning the above tip in 0.5 M KCl, the transformation
of a core-shaped apex into a geometrically well-defined Au disk nanoelectrode
with different dimensions can be controllably and reproducibly achieved.
Scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and
steady-state voltammetry were used to determine the size of nanoelectrodes.
The results showed that the specific etching and insulation method
not only avoids the use of toxic etching solution and the uncontrollable
treatment to expose the tip but also makes possible the controllable
and reproducible fabrication of Au disk nanoelectrode down to 3 nm
in radius. The nanoelectrodes with well-demonstrated analytical performance
were further applied for amperometrically monitoring dopamine release
from single rat pheochromacytoma cells with high spatial resolution.
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Liu, Yingzi; Li, Meina; Zhang, Fan; Zhu, Anwei; Shi, Guoyue (2016). Development of Au Disk Nanoelectrode Down to 3 nm
in Radius for Detection of Dopamine Release from a Single Cell. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/ac5042999