(245f) The Electrochemical Impedance Response of a Continuous Glucose Monitor | AIChE

(245f) The Electrochemical Impedance Response of a Continuous Glucose Monitor

Authors 

Gao, M. - Presenter, University of Florida
Orazem, M. E., University of Florida
Kong, R., Medtronic Diabetes
The Gerischer impedance has been observed in systems with an electrochemical reaction coupled with a homogeneous chemical reaction. Under the assumptions of linear homogeneous reaction, equal diffusion coefficients and a semi-infinite condition, the Gerischer impedance can be solved analytically [1, 2]. However, with non-ideal electrochemical systems, where coupled nonlinear homogeneous reactions and various mass-transfer properties make exact analytical resolution impossible, a more detailed analysis is required.

In the present work, a mathematical model for the impedance response of glucose-oxidase based electrochemical biosensors has been developed [3]. The complicated coupling between thirteen homogeneous reactions and three heterogeneous reactions has been considered in the model. The homogeneous reactions included anomerization between α-D-glucose and β-D-glucose and four reversible enzymatic catalytic reactions transforming β-D-glucose and oxygen into gluconic acid and hydrogen peroxide, pH-dependent enzymatic activity and a biological buffer system. The electroactive hydrogen peroxide was considered to be reversibly oxidized or reduced at the electrode.

The mathematical model is solved numerically by using the finite-difference method and Newman’s BAND algorithm [4]. The model demonstrates how the coupled non-linear homogeneous reactions effect the diffusion impedance, which has broadened the scope of the Gerischer impedance. The model can be used to explore the influence of various system parameters on limiting current, reaction profiles, and diffusion impedance. The system parameters, including interstitial glucose concentration, oxygen concentration, active enzyme concentration, diffusion coefficients, reaction rate constants and layer thickness, are related to various sensor working conditions such as body sugar level, inflammation, sensor degradation and sensor design.

References

  1. H. Gerischer, “Wechselstrompolarisation Von Elektroden Mit Einem Potentialbes- timmenden Schritt Beim Gleichgewichtspotential,” Zeitschrift fur Physikalische Chemie, 198 (1951) 286–313.
  2. M. E. Orazem and B. Tribollet, Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken, NJ, 2017), 2nd edition, p. 279-293.
  3. M. Gao, M. S. Hazelbaker, R. Kong, and M. E. Orazem, “Mathematical Model for the Electrochemical Impedance Response of a Continuous Glucose Monitor,” Electrochimica Acta, 275(2018),119-132
  4. J. S. Newman and K. E. Thomas-Alyea, Electrochemical Systems (John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken, NJ, 2004), 3rd edition.

Acknowledgement

The support of Medtronic Diabetes (Northridge, CA) and Andrea Varsavsky, program monitor, is gratefully acknowledged.