1. Electrochemical Roughening of Thin-Film Platinum for Neural Probe Arrays and Biosensing Applications.
- Author
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Ivanovskaya, Anna N., Belle, Anna M., Yorita, Allison M., Fang Qian, Chen, Supin, Tooker, Angela, Lozada, Rose García, Dahlquist, Dylan, and Tolosa, Vanessa
- Subjects
PLATINUM electrodes ,BIOSENSORS ,MICROELECTRODES - Abstract
We report a method for electrochemical roughening of thin-film platinum (Pt) electrodes that increases active surface area, decreases electrode impedance, increases charge injection capacity, increases sensitivity of biosensors and improves adhesion of electrochemically deposited films. First, a well-established technique for electrochemical roughening of thick Pt electrodes (wires and foils) by oxidation-reduction pulses was modified for use on thin-film Pt. Optimal roughening of thin-film Pt electrodes with this established protocol in a sulfuric acid solution was found to occur at about four times lower frequency than that typically used for thick Pt. This modification in established procedure created a 21x surface area increase but showed nanoscale cracks from inter-grain Pt dissolution that compromised film integrity. A crack free surface with Pt nanocrystal re-deposition (20-30 nm in size) and higher enhancement in surface area (44x) was obtained when the electrolyte was switched to a non-adsorbing perchloric acid solution. These electrochemically roughened electrodes have charge injection limits comparable to titanium nitride and just below carbon nanotube-based materials. Roughened microelectrodes showed a 2.8x increase in sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide detection, indicative of improved enzymatic biosensor performance. Platinum iridium and iridium oxide coatings on these roughened surfaces showed an improvement in adhesion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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