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Voltammetric techniques pulsed amperometric detection

Amperometric detection is a very sensitive technique. In principle, voltammetric detectors can be used for all compounds which have functional groups which are easily reduced or oxidized. Apart from a few cations (Fe , Co ), it is chiefly anions such as cyanide, sulfide and nitrite which can be determined in the ion analysis sector. The most important applications lie however in the analysis of sugars by anion chromatography and in clinical analysis using a form of amperometric detection know as Pulsed Amperometric Detection (PAD). [Pg.11]

Voltammetry has been adapted to HPLC (when the mobile phase is conducting), and CE as a detection technique for electroactive compounds. In this usage, the voltammetric cell has been miniaturised (to about 1 p.L) in order not to dilute the analytes after separation. This method of amperometric detection in the pulsed mode is very sensitive. However, this device makes it possible to detect few analytically important molecules besides phenols, aromatic amines and thiols. [Pg.670]

Voltammetric techniques that can be applied in the stripping step are staircase, pulse, differential pulse, and square-wave voltammetry. Each of them has been described in detail in previous chapters. Their common characteristic is a bell-shaped form of the response caused by the definite amount of accumulated substance. Staircase voltammetry is provided by computer-controlled instruments as a substitution for the classical linear scan voltammetry [102]. Normal pulse stripping voltammetry is sometimes called reverse pulse voltammetry. Its favorable property is the re-plating of the electroactive substance in between the pulses [103]. Differential pulse voltammetry has the most rigorously discriminating capacitive current, whereas square-wave voltammetry is the fastest stripping technique. All four techniques are insensitive to fast and reversible surface reactions in which both the reactant and product are immobilized on the electrode surface [104,105]. In all techniques mentioned above, the maximum response, or the peak current, depends linearly on the surface, or volume, concentration of the accumulated substance. The factor of this linear proportionality is the amperometric constant of the voltammetric technique. It determines the sensitivity of the method. The lowest detectable concentration of the analyte depends on the smallest peak current that can be reliably measured and on the efficacy of accumulation. For instance, in linear scan voltammetry of the reversible surface reaction i ads + ne Pads, the peak current is [52]... [Pg.217]


See other pages where Voltammetric techniques pulsed amperometric detection is mentioned: [Pg.482]    [Pg.799]    [Pg.336]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.256]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.1523]    [Pg.1282]    [Pg.335]   


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Amperometric Techniques

Amperometric detection

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Pulse techniques

Pulse voltammetric techniques

Pulsed amperometric detection

Pulsed techniques

Pulsed voltammetric techniques

Voltammetric

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Voltammetric techniques

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