Scanning electrochemical microscopy for bioimaging

T. E. Lin, A. Bondarenko, A. Lesch, H. H. Girault

研究成果: Chapter同行評審

摘要

Scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) is a scanning probe technique where typically micro- or nanoelectrodes are translated in close proximity to a specimen immersed in an electrolyte solution. The flux of redox active species between the SECM probe and the sample can be used to map local surface reactivity, to record the sample topography, or to manipulate the microenvironment of surfaces for micropatterning. Because SECM can be used in phosphate-buffered solutions with probes acting in contact-less or soft-contact mode, the technique is very attractive for the characterization of biological samples. Compared to microscopic techniques, the advantages of SECM include that the capability of extracting electrochemical information in samples and avoiding potential optical interferences, e.g., from sample color-background.

原文English
主出版物標題Encyclopedia of Interfacial Chemistry
主出版物子標題Surface Science and Electrochemistry
發行者Elsevier
頁面445-452
頁數8
ISBN(電子)9780128098943
ISBN(列印)9780128097397
DOIs
出版狀態Published - 1 1月 2018

指紋

深入研究「Scanning electrochemical microscopy for bioimaging」主題。共同形成了獨特的指紋。

引用此