Electrochemistry
Since many metalloenzymes catalyze transformations that involve oxidation/reduction reactions, it is important to be able to measure the reduction potentials of the metal sites. The MRIL operates an excellent electrochemical setup in the Adams laboratory [Mike Adams, UGa].
Acronyms, synonyms
- Cyclic Voltammetry (the most common electrochemical method)
- (There are many other electrochemical methods)
Measured physical quantities
- Current as a function of potential applied to an electrode
- Current as a function of time at an applied potential
Information available
- Reduction potentials and electron transfer rate constants
- Diffusion coefficient and concentration of electroactive species
- Electrochemical reversibility of an electrode reaction
- Chemical reversibility of an electrode reaction
- Electrode reaction mechanism
Information NOT available, limitations
- The location of the electroactive species at the time of electron transfer
- Identity of the electroactive species, except from the formal reduction potential
- Absolute delineation of electrode reaction mechanism involving coupled chemical reactions in solution
- Kinetic parameters for fully reversible and for fully irreversible electrode reactions
Examples of questions that can be answered
- Strength of ligand coordination of metal site(s)
- Temperature dependencies of conformational changes that affect electron transfer properties (e.g., reaction center entropy changes)
- Kinetics of coupled chemical reactions between electrochemically generated redox states and solution-resident reaction partners
- Kinetics of redox-coupled ligand/metal association and dissociationreactions
Major advantages
- Thermodynamics and kinetics of electron transfer reactions can be measured
- Methods are easy to implement and relatively inexpensive
- Very negative redox reactions can be approached (e.g., photosynthesis)
- Minimal sample volumes
Major disadvantages
- Easy to obtain results that are ambiguous
- Easy to obtain results that are corrupted by experimental artifacts
- The sample becomes an electronic component of the instrument whose properties can affect the results obtained
Sample constraints
- Minimum sample concentration of ca. 0.05 mM and minimum convenient volume of ca. 1 mL (special experiments can use very small volumes and concentrations)
- Sample must be electroactive or react with an electroactive couple
- Sample solution should be electrically conductive for most experiments