SQU Journal for Science, 2021, 26(1), 8-21  DOI:10.24200/squjs.vol26iss1pp8-21 

Sultan Qaboos University  

8 

 

A Surface Network Based on Polytyramine/ 
Gold Nanoparticles: Characterization, 
Kinetics, Thermodynamics and Selective 
Determination of Norepinephrine    

Emad A. Khudaish* and Arwa Al-Maskari  

Department of Chemistry, College of Science, Sultan Qaboos University, P.O. Box 36, PC 
123, Al-khoud, Muscat, Sultanate of Oman. *E-mail: ejoudi@squ.edu.om. 

ABSTRACT: A solid-state sensor was fabricated by a spontaneous electrochemical deposition of polytyramine (Ptyr) 

film onto a glassy carbon electrode (GCE) which was further peripherally supported by gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). 

The surface materials of the developed sensor (AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE) were characterized by X-ray photoelectron 

spectroscopy (XPS), electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), cyclic voltammetry (CV) and differential pulse 

voltammetry (DPV). The rate constant of charge transfers (kct) of the as-prepared sensor (8.77 × 10
-4

 cm/s) was 

evaluated by fitting the charge transfer resistance (Rct) data in the presence of ferric-ferrous hexacyanide redox couple 

solution, [Fe(CN)6]
3-/4-

. The voltammetric behavior of norepinephrine (NOR) was confirmed to follow an irreversible 

reaction mechanism at which the estimated diffusion coefficient value was 7.39 × 10
-5

 cm
2
/s. The sensor showed a 

large enhancement on NOR oxidation and comparatively lowered its detection limit (DL3) to 0.130 M (22 ppb). It 

was also applied for selective determination of NOR in the presence of high concentrations of ascorbic acid (AA) and 

uric acid (UA). The interference study highlighted the great stability of the proposed sensor by generating a similar 

sensitivity as in the pure NOR solution. The analytical performance of the proposed system was validated successfully 

for pharmaceutical and biological samples with tolerable recovery percentages. 

 

Keywords: Polytyramine; Gold nanoparticles; Norepinephrine; Ascorbic acid and Uric acid.  

 ،والحرارية   الديناميكيا الحركية ،ذرات النانو لعنصر الذهب : دراسة تشخيص البناء سطح شبكي من بوليمر التيرامين و بناء

نتاايية يي تحيي  النورابنرريناال  

 روى المسكريأعماد خديش و 
 

ر التيرامين على سطح قطب الكاربون الزجاجي وتدعيمه بطبقة بناء مستشعر صلب الحالة بواسطة التراكم االلكتروكهربائي لطبقة رقيقة من بوليم :صيخمال

حساب ثابت من ذرات النانو لعنصر الذهب . تم دراسة و تشخيص المادة المترسبة على السطح بواسطة الطرق الضوئية والكهروكيميائية المختلفة و كذلك 

عكسي لمادة النورابنفرين و تقييم معامل روليتي . تم اثبات السلوك الغيرتمؤكسد( الك-سرعة انتقال االلكترونات للمستشعر باستخدام مسبار )مختزل

جزء من المليون . تم دراسة االنتقائية التحليلية  0.000ظهر المستشعر قابلية عالية على اكسدة النورابنفرين الى حدود دنيا تصل الى أاالنتشارية )النفاذية( . 

االسكوربيك و حامض اليوريك كمواد بيولوجية متداخلة قادرة على تشويش االشارة الكهربائية . كذلك تم تقييم  للنورابنفرين بوجود تراكيز عالية من حامض

 .القدرة التحليلية للمستشعر المطور على تقدير النورابنفرين في عينات حقيقية صيدالنية و بيولوجية

 

 .حامض اليوريك حامض االسكوربيك، ،لعنصر الذهب ذرات النانو  ليمر التيرامين، نورابنفرين،بو :مرتاحيةالكيمات ال

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



A SURFACE NETWORK BASED ON POLYTYRAMINE/GOLD NANOPARTICLES 

9 

 

1. Introduction 

onstruction of chemically modified electrodes based on the incorporation of, or a coating of, specific conducting 

materials is one of the central research activities of the past decades [1,2]. The selection and characterization of 

modified surface materials are playing important roles in testing the stability, the reproducibility and the analytical 

performance of certain electro-active substances.  The deposition of polymeric nanocomposite materials onto electrode 

surfaces by electrochemical means is an interesting topic in terms of producing a uniform coating with layers of 

specific thickness [3,4].    

Tyramine (tyr) has received considerable attention as an ideal monomer for electrochemical deposition due to the 

presence of a free amino functional group that simplifies doping of organic or inorganic materials [5,6]. Moreover, the 

phenolic functionality can be easily oxidized for initiation of a polymeric reaction and formation by propagation steps 

for a final generation of the polymer [7,8]. Polytyramine (Ptyr) film deposited on different substrates under various 

experimental conditions has been studied to understand its structure, composition, thermal and mechanical properties, 

along with its conductivity for sensing applications [9-11]. 

There has been great interest in nano-sized elements such as gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) for the fabrication of 

electrochemical sensors due to their outstanding physical and chemical properties, comprising their small size, high 

catalytic activity, large surface area, and their having compatible environment [12,13]. Moreover, electrode 

modification by doping of AuNPs onto a polymeric moiety such as Ptyr can be functionalized for improving the 

electronic conductivity of surface materials which enhances the kinetics of the electron transfer process. The presence 

of a free amino group makes Ptyr an attractive structure for further modification by attachment of an active electron 

mediator such as AuNPs. The resulting AuNPs. Ptyr-GCE modified electrode is expected to have a characteristic active 

surface area, a larger adsorption domain, and hence a greater catalytic capacity. 

Catecholamines are vital neurotransmitters that control the physiological processes in human bodies by regulating 

communication within the neural network [14]. They are released from noradrenergic neurons in the central nervous 

system (CNS) and sympathetic nervous system (SNS) for many neurophysiological processes such as monitoring heart 

rate, fatty acid placement, stress sensing, body temperature, learning, and memory [15,16]. Damage in secretion or 

uptake of neurotransmitters is known to cause neurodegenerative diseases and psychiatric disorders [17].  

NOR is one significant transmitter which has a strong influence on attention and response activities within the 

brain, is a blood pressure controller, and regulates emotional excitement and mood disorders [18]. It has an important 

role in the treatment of hypertension, bronchial asthma, organic heart disease and myocardial infarction, and in cardiac 

surgery [19]. Abnormal levels of NOR in plasma and urine are utilized as a biomarker for several diseases such as 

hypertension, diabetes mellitus ketoacidosis, neuroblastoma and Parkinson’s disease [20,21]. Therefore, a large 

number of methods have been developed for the sensitive and selective quantification of trace amount of NOR in 

biological samples or pharmaceutical formulations [22,23]. A nonconventional method for rapid detection with great 

precision and reproducibility has been an urgent demand for neurotransmitter analysis that includes the application of 

electrochemical sensors with highly reactive surface materials [24,25]. Electrochemical approaches applying various 

systems of interest have been proposed for selective and sensitive analysis, based on active surface modifications 

including the attachment of metal nanoparticles to conducting polymers [26], surfactant assisted metal oxide 

nanoparticles [27], self-assembled L-cysteine/AuNPs/MWCNT [28], and a graphene modified electrode [29], among 

many others. 

In the present work, the attachment of AuNPs has been achieved by direct surface casting a drop of AuNPs over 

the pre-fabricated (Ptyr-GCE) surface. The rich π-bonding electrons of the polymer backbone attract strongly to 

electrons of gold atoms in the outer orbitals. The resulting modified electrochemical system (AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE) was 

studied to explore its composition, stability and electrochemical performance for the selective determination of 

norepinephrine (NOR) in the presence and absence of electrochemically active interference biological species such as 

ascorbic acid (AA) and uric acid (UA). Furthermore, the analytical performance of the proposed sensor was tested for 

real samples (pharmaceutical ampoule solution and plasma blood). 

2.   Experimental section 

2.1   Apparatus and chemicals 

A BAS 50W Potentiostat was used to control all electrochemical measurements that were conducted in a three-

electrode cell. A bare GCE (before modification) was used as the working electrode (WE), a platinum coil as the 

counter electrode (CE) and Ag/AgCl/KCl(sat.) as the reference electrode (RE). The potentiostat and electrodes were 

purchased from BAS (Bioanalytical System, West Lafayette, IN, USA). The WE was regularly polished prior to each 

experiment to a mirror surface using a polishing cloth and alumina slurry (5.0 and 1.0m), rinsed with acetone and 

washed fully with distilled water, then ultra-sonicated in water for 5 min using JAC Ultra Sonic (LABKOREA INC, 

Korea), and finally rinsed thoroughly with distilled water.  

The tyramine (tyr) monomer, norepinephrine (NOR), ascorbic acid (AA), uric acid (UA), potassium 

ferrohexacyanate, K4(Fe(CN)6, potassium ferrihexacyanate, K3(Fe(CN)6, and sulfuric acid (H2SO4), all were of 

analytical grades purchased from Sigma-Aldrich Chemie, Germany. Potassium orthophosphate (KH2PO4) and 

C 



EMAD A. KHUDAISH and ARWA AL-MASKARI 

 

10 

 

dipotassium phosphate (K2HPO4) were obtained from BDH, UK. Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) of 30 nm size come with 

a citrate ligand (Nanopartz Inc., USA).  A moderately alkaline background electrolyte (pH = 7.4) made of 0.1 M 

phosphate buffer solution (PBS) was used for selective determination of NOR in the electrochemical cell (size = 20 

mL) which was degassed for 10 min prior to measurement with oxygen-free nitrogen gas, and which was blanketed 

throughout the experiment. 

2.2   Fabrication of the surface network 

The proposed AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE surface network was fabricated by deposition of Ptyr onto the clean GCE via 

reversible voltammetric cycling followed by a drop casting of 20 L AuNPs. The electrochemical deposition of the 

Ptyr was achieved by continuous scanning of the WE potential between 0 mV and 1400 mV vs. Ag/ AgCl at 50 mV/s 

for 30 scans (15 cycles) in 0.1 M of H2SO4 containing 20 mM tyr monomer. The deposition time limit for controlling 

the thickness of the Ptyr film is a crucial factor to build up a sensitive surface material possessing a good conductivity. 

Therefore, lowering the number of repetitive cycles to 15 was sufficient to fabricate a thin and stable platform for 

doping electroactive materials such as AuNPs and presenting an active surface for electron shuttling with the electrode 

substrate. The electrode sensitivity decreases dramatically with a larger deposition time limit of Ptyr (above 20 cycles), 

in agreement with previous experimental data describing the surface resistivity, passivation and limitation of active 

area due to increasing film thickness [30]. 

2.3   Characterization of the surface network  

The surface materials of the modified electrode were essentially identified (structure, composition and reactivity) 

using various analytical tools. An X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS) machine (Omicron Nanotechnology XPS 

system, Germany) was employed to determine the composition of materials deposited onto the GCE. The obtained 

XPS spectra of individual components were de-convoluted using a Gaussian Lorentzian function after background 

subtraction with a Shirley function in Casa XPS software (Casa Software Ltd, UK). The binding energies were 

calibrated with respect to a adventitious C 1s feature at 284.6 eV.    

Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) experiments using a Bi-Potentiostat PC-14 (Gamry, USA) were 

conducted to identify the resistivity of the deposited materials on the electron transfer processes. The EIS data were 

recorded in a three-electrode cell containing 5 mM of [Fe(CN)6]
3-/4-

 solution within a frequency range of between 100 

kHz to 1 Hz at an amplitude of 5 mV. Randle’s equivalent circuit was used to demonstrate the electrochemical 

properties at the solid/electrolyte interface at open circuit potential. 

Cyclic Voltammetry (CV) and Differential Pulse Voltammetry (DPV) techniques (BAS Software, USA) were 

used for electrochemical deposition of the modified electrode, reactivity and selectivity tests, and analytical 

performance for sensitivity of determination of NOR in artificial and real samples.    

2.4   Preparation of real samples  

A noradrenaline ampoule (1 mg/mL) and plasma blood samples were obtained from SQU hospital, Muscat, 

Oman. The drug solution was diluted 10 times with PBS (0.1 M of pH = 7.4) to prepare a 0.591 mM stock solution 

which was applied directly for DPV measurements of NOR. On the other hand, the plasma blood was diluted 3 times 

with PBS and the standard addition method for as-prepared 0.5 mM of NOR was applied. The recovery percentage of 

NOR in both real samples was computed to evaluate the sensitivity and reliability of the proposed sensor. 

3.   Results and discussion  

3.1   Fabrication of the surface network materials  

Electrochemical deposition of Ptyr film on the GCE surface was obtained by repetitive voltammetric scanning of 

30 segments (15 cycles) using the cyclic voltammetry (CV) method. The electrode potential was reversibly stepped 

between 0 and 1400 mV vs Ag/AgCl at a rate of 50 mV/s in an electrochemical cell containing 20 mM of tyr monomer 

dissolved in 0.1 M H2SO4. Figure 1 shows an irreversible anodic peak for tyr oxidation at 1175 mV (for the first cycle) 

which decreases significantly at the preliminary four successive cycles. Moreover, the anodic peak potential is shifted 

negatively to 1125 mV in the fourth cycle. The above trend suggests a surface passivation due to the generation of low 

conductivity short oligomers. The growth of the polymeric film in the subsequent cycles from cycle 5 (dotted black) to 

cycle 15 (solid black) as shown in the inset is associated with reduction of the surface resistivity, apparent by a 

spontaneous increase of the anodic peak current at 1135 mV. The propagation of the polymer (Pt yr) is predominantly 

carried out by the formation of cationic radical intermediates due to an oxidation reaction of the phenolic group present 

in the tyr monomer [31]. The phenoxy cationic radical produced in the initiation step undergoes a dimerization reaction 

by attacking a new tyr molecule (linkage via the ortho position in the aromatic ring). With subsequent cycling, the 

oligomerization process is continued to form an insoluble propagated polymer that is deposited onto the electrode 

surface in a mechanism consistent with those demonstrated for Ptyr deposition at sputtered [32] and 

graphite [33] electrodes. In the present experimental conditions, the 15 repetitive cycles were appraised to build a thin 

polymeric film on the electrode surface. It was observed that the anodic peak current adopted nearly a constant value 

above 15 cycles, indicating the growth of a thicker film. The thickness and the amount of Ptyr deposited on the 

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0013468614010135#bib0130
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0013468614010135#bib0135


A SURFACE NETWORK BASED ON POLYTYRAMINE/GOLD NANOPARTICLES 

11 

 

electrode surface are directly affected by the nature of the electrode substrate, the concentration of tyr monomer and 

electrolyte composition (mostly the pH), the number of potential cycles and scan rates. It should be noted that the 

oxidation of tyr in an acidic medium results in the formation of Ptyr with a rich number of free cationic amino groups 

(one per a chain). Accordingly, the experimental conditions and data presented in Figure 1 were selected to generate a 

thin Ptyr platform film for doping active surface materials such as gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). The above pattern of 

fabrication increases the electrode surface area and enhances the electron transfer kinetics with the targeted 

electroactive species. For this task, a drop of 20 L AuNPs was mechanically added onto the moiety of the fabricated 

Ptyr modified surface.  

The proposed sensor (AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE) was characterized using various analytical tools and finally applied for 

the selective determination of NOR in artificial and real samples. 

 

 
 

Figure 1.  Reversible potentiodynamic waves (15 cycles) using GCE in 20 mM of acidified tyr monomer. The 

electrode potential scanned between 0 and 1400 mV at a rate of 50 mV/s. 

 

3.2   Characterization of surface materials 

3.2.1   XPS studies   

The XPS core level spectra of C 1s peaks obtained from different samples are shown in Figure 2. The XPS 

spectra of a bare GCE surface shown in Figure 2 (A) produces approximately an equal percentage of (C-C)/ (C-H) sp
2
 

hybridization obtained at (284.5 eV) and sp
3
 hybridization at (285.0 eV), respectively. The structure and percentage of 

(C-C)/(C-H) function are changed upon deposition of the polymer and came as a single peak at its preference position 

of 284.6 eV with 93.6% as shown in Figure 2 (B). Two extra convoluted peaks were obtained at 285.7 eV (21.3%) and 

287.1 eV (12.6%) characterized for functional groups of (C-N)/(C-O) and (C=O), respectively. Upon casting of the 

AuNPs, the C 1s spectra for the fabricated (AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE) shows some distinctive features on the nature of surface 

functionalities in terms of binding energies and percent concentrations. Figure 2 (C) depicts three convoluted peaks 

obtained at 284.8 eV (79%), 285.9 eV (38.3%) and 289 eV (32.1%) assigned to (C-C)/(C-H), (C-N)/(C-O), and (C=O), 

respectively.   

 
 

 

 

 

 



EMAD A. KHUDAISH and ARWA AL-MASKARI 

 

12 

 

 

 

 
 

 

Figure 2.  XPS spectra for surface samples; (A) C 1s of pristine GCE, (B) C 1s of Ptyr-GCE, (C) C 1s of AuNPs.Ptyr-

GCE, and (D) Au 4f of AuNPs onto Ptyr moiety.  

 

 

The above characteristic topographies presented in Figure 2 (B) and (C) are evidence for successful deposition 

of Ptyr and the construction of the proposed (AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE) sensor. The presence of AuNPs on the surface 

materials is confirmed by the high resolution XPS spectra for the Au 4f pattern shown in Figure 2 (D). Two 

deconvoluted peaks at electronic states of 82.7 eV (Au 4f7/2) and 86.3 eV (Au 4f5/2) [34] were obtained with a spin-

orbit separation of 3.7 eV confirming the attachment of Au species onto the surface moiety [35]. The experimental data 

and all features presented in Figure 2 are evidence for successful surface modification and the final preparation of the 

proposed sensor. 

3.2.2   EIS and electrochemical studies   

The structure of the solid/liquid interface is subject to some limiting factors that affect the reactivity of the 

fabricated sensors. Restriction factors are centralized by the internal resistance generated by surface modification and 

can be represented by the impedance of the electrodes under investigation. The internal resistance is composed of three 

components: charge transfer resistance (Rct) which arises by surface activation, the omhic component which is 

described by the solution resistance (Rs) due to solution resistivity and the nature of surface materials, and finally the 

concentration or mass transport resistance (generally considered as a pure diffusion). These important features can be 

studied efficiently using the electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) under experimental conditions of a narrow 

potential window and a wide frequency range.  

The Nyquist plot presented in Figure 3(A) demonstrates the applied potential at the open circuit value of a redox 

probe (5 mM of [Fe(CN)6]
3-/4-

) which is characterized by both faradaic and non-faradaic processes. The faradaic 

process is initiated by the surface activation process and defined by the electrode kinetics (fast or slow). Therefore, it is 

a direct measurement of (Rct) and describes the extent of impedance (inhibition) of the electron transfer process at the 

modified surfaces.  

Mathematically, it is inversely proportional to the rate constant of the electron transfer process (kct) induced by 

surface materials and simply given by (Rct * kct = K) [36], where K is a constant equal to 0.749 cm.ohm/s for the 

present experimental conditions, which involve the transfer of a single electron (n = 1) at ambient temperature (T = 298 

K). The non-faradaic process arises due to charging of the double layer capacitance (Cdl) via electrostatic attraction of 

ions at the interface satisfied by the value of potential across it. In addition, a typical semicircular curve with resistance 

zone combines both (Rct) and the uncompensated solution resistance (Rs) imposed by the working electrolyte, both 

obtained at high frequency. The mass transport process (diffusion) is depicted as a straight line obtained at low 

frequencies.  

 



A SURFACE NETWORK BASED ON POLYTYRAMINE/GOLD NANOPARTICLES 

13 

 

 

 
 

Figure 3.  (A) EIS spectra represented by Nyquist plot for bare GCE (black open circle), Ptyr -GCE (red cross) and 

AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE (blue closed circle) in the presence of 5 mM [Fe(CN)6]
3/4

. (B) CVs for bare GCE (black), Ptyr-

GCE (red) and AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE (blue dotted) in the presence of 5 mM [Fe(CN)6]
3/4

. 

 

The EIS fitting data for all electrodes depicted in Figure 3(A) have different values of Rct owing to the nature of 

the surface materials. For instance, the bare GCE (black open circle) produces a value of 470 Ω which increased 

extremely to 2360 Ω prior to deposition of Ptyr onto GCE (red cross). The value of Rct obtained for AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE 

(blue closed circle) is lowered dramatically to 855 Ω. Apparently, introducing of AuNPs as a new member of the 

surface materials improves the kinetics (decreases the surface resistivity) of the fabricated sensor. Consequently, the 

computed (kct) value for the proposed (AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE) sensor was 8.77 × 10
-4

 cm/s, higher by 2.8 times over that 

(3.18 × 10
-4

 cm/s) of the (Ptyr-GCE) modified electrode. It is obvious that the presence of exterior AuNPs increases 

both the electrode conductivity and the active surface area. 

Figure 3(B) depicts the electrochemical behavior of bare GCE (solid black) and as-prepared modified electrodes 

Ptyr-GCE (solid red) and AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE (dotted blue), respectively, in the presence of a redox probe (5 mM of 

[Fe(CN)6]
3-/4-

) using the CV method. Both bare GCE and AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE produce very well-defined and comparable 

reversible redox waves with peak potential separation (Ep = Ep,a  Ep,c) of 106 mV and 188 mV, respectively. In the 

case of Ptyr-GCE, the calculated (Ep = 282 mV) value becomes much larger due to the evident potential shift (far 

positive and negative) of both anodic and cathodic peaks, suggesting slow electrode kinetics. The presence of AuNPs 



EMAD A. KHUDAISH and ARWA AL-MASKARI 

 

14 

 

onto the Ptyr moiety improves the electron transfer process by lowering the electrode over-potential by approximately 

100 mV. Moreover, the response currents (anodic and cathodic) of the AuNPs.Ptyr modified surface are much greater 

than that recorded for the virgin Ptyr surface, consisting with the experimental data of EIS presented in Figure 3(A). 

The above characteristic mapping confirms a successful construction of modified electrodes and the importance of 

AuNPs as a reactive dopant. A further investigation on the behavior of NOR oxidation at various electrodes was 

conducted to characterize the significance of AuNP doped surface materials.  

Figure 4 depicts the electrochemical oxidation of 50 M NOR at various electrodes in 0.1 M of PBS (pH = 7.4) 

and (v = 50 mV/s) using the DPV technique. The electrochemical measurements were expressed by the change in the 

current response of NOR oxidation (I) after eliminating the current response of the background electrolyte generated 

by each electrode. Obviously, the current response at the bare GCE is the lowest compared to the as-prepared modified 

electrodes which can be attributed to weak adsorption of NOR. In the intermediate (Ptyr-GCE) surface, the current 

response is little higher than the bare substrate due to the presence of more active surface sites to attract NOR. The 

proposed sensor (AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE) shows a prominent current response approaching 1.75 times greater than that of 

the (Ptyr-GCE) modified electrode. The presence of AuNPs has an evident synergism action for accelerating the 

electron transfer process with NOR and also offers a wide adsorption assembled surface for stronger bonding. It should 

be noted that the peak potential of NOR oxidation is shifted in a more negative direction by 25 mV compared to the 

modified Ptyr-GCE. It is good evidence for a rapid electrochemical reaction that is explicitly pertinent to the surface 

materials of the proposed sensor. 

 

 
 

Figure 4.  DPV current responses at 50 mV/s for the oxidation of 50 M NOR in 0.1 M PBS (pH = 7.4) recorded at 

bare GCE (black), Ptyr-GCE (red) and AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE (blue).  

 

3.2.3 The behavior of NOR oxidation at AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE     

The electrochemical behavior of NOR at the developed AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE was monitored using the cyclic 

voltammetry (CV) technique as shown in Figure 5 (A). Apparently, the reaction mechanism of NOR is following an 

irreversible mode concluded by the growth of an anodic peak at 240 mV in the forward scan corresponding to NOR 

oxidation, which increases linearly with increasing [NOR]. In the reverse cathodic scan, only a peak shoulder of 

constant current response is collected at 130 mV for the entire [NOR] range. This trend can be attributed to the reaction 

mechanism of NOR oxidation which involves a cyclization step [37]. It is important to note that some literature reports 

that NOR experiences a reversible reaction by varying the recorded anodic and cathodic peaks with electrode scan rates 

without considering the size (ratio) of both obtained peaks. 

Figure 5 (B) depicts the linear relationship of the anodic peak current (Ip) as a function of [NOR] collected from 

the basic experimental data of Figure 5 (A). The resulting slope of (0.0577 A/M) is important to calculate the 

diffusion coefficient of NOR applying the Randles-Sevcik equation for irreversible processes [36]. The calculated 

value is 7.39 × 10
-5

 cm
2
/s assuming a transfer of two electrons (n = 2) by NOR oxidation. The obtained value for the 

present system is approximately two times greater than (3.30 × 10
-5

 cm
2
/s) evaluated at a ZnO/CNTs modified 

electrode [38].  

 



A SURFACE NETWORK BASED ON POLYTYRAMINE/GOLD NANOPARTICLES 

15 

 

 
Figure 5. (A) CV waves for the behavior of NOR at AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE (v = 50 mV/s) in PBS (pH = 7.4) recorded for a 

range of [NOR]; (a) 0, (b) 5, (c) 10, (d) 15, (e) 20, (f) 25, (g) 30, (h) 35, (i) 40, and (j) 50 M. (B) The linear 

relationship of Ip vs [NOR] of the original DPV data presented in Fig. 5 (A).   

 

 

The minimum and maximum boundaries of NOR diffusion coefficient values were not identified since this 

thermodynamic parameter is affected by the electrolyte composition, the nature of surface materials, the ionic or 

molecular size, and the temperature.  

The reactivity of the proposed sensor (AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE) was tested under experimental conditions given in 

Figure 5 (A) for 10 cycles (20 segments) in the presence of 50 M of NOR. The anodic peak current decreased 

spontaneously with subsequent cycles to fall to 86.0% (in the last three cycles) of its ideal initial value as shown in 

Figure 6. This marks a change in the nature of the surface due to the accumulation of inactive oxidation byproducts. 

Moreover, it describes the robustness and stability of the developed sensor against surface poisoning.  It is worth noting 

that the oxidative pathway of NOR is initiated by the transfer of two-electrons and two-protons, forming an unstable o-

quinone derivative that rapidly cyclized via intermolecular attraction to produce a leucochrome derivative. The reaction 

is propagated to the formation of an electrochemically inactive melanin polymeric species [37, 39]. 

 

 

 
Figure 6. The reactivity test of AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE (current response as a function of repetitive CV cycles) for the 

oxidation of 50 M NOR in 0.1 M PBS (pH = 7.4).  

  



EMAD A. KHUDAISH and ARWA AL-MASKARI 

 

16 

 

HO

HO

NH2

OH

Norepinephrine

O

O

NH2

OH

O-Quinone

HO

HO

OH

NH

Leucochrome

Inactive Melanine Polymer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Scheme 1. The oxidative pathway of NOR describing the cyclization step and end propagation mechanism for the 

formation of inactive melamine polymer. 

 

3.2.4 Selective determination of NOR at AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE     

The practical application of AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE for NOR quantification is presented in Figure 7 employing DPV in 

0.1 M of PBS (pH = 7.4) at (v = 50 mV/s). A well-defined anodic peak current was obtained at 192 mV vs Ag/AgCl 

corresponding to NOR oxidation, which directly correlated to successive increments of [NOR]. The stability and 

reactivity of the sensor is diagnosed by bringing the anodic peak to a constant potential value for the entire applied 

[NOR] range. The linear plot of (Ip) as a function of [NOR] shown in the inset of Figure 7 produces a slope of (0.1189 

A/M), by which the calculated detection limit (DL3) was 0.130 M (22 ppb).  

 

 
Figure 7. (A) DPV current responses for NOR oxidation at AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE (v = 50 mV/s) in PBS (pH = 7.4) 

recorded as a function of [NOR]; (a) 0.5, (b) 1, (c) 2, (d) 3, (e) 4, (f) 5, (g) 6, (h) 7, (i) 8, (j) 9, (k) 11, (l) 13, (m) 15, (n) 

18, and (o) 22 M. (B) The linear relationship of Ip vs [NOR] of the original data presented in Figure 7(A). 
 



A SURFACE NETWORK BASED ON POLYTYRAMINE/GOLD NANOPARTICLES 

17 

 

Table 1 lists the analytical performance of various modified electrodes [40-46] for NOR quantification in terms 

of detection limit, sensitivity and applied electrochemical method. The present electrochemical system is highly 

competent and exhibits superior performance to some relevant polymeric constituent surfaces. 

Inspection of the competency of the proposed sensor was performed by selective determination of NOR in the 

presence of AA (250 M) and UA (50 M) as electroactive interference species. Figure 8(A) shows the DPV anodic 

peak for NOR oxidation obtained at 192 mV which increases gradually with subsequent addition of NOR for a 

concentration range between 0.5 M and 25 M. The inset of Figure 8(A) shows that the DPV anodic peaks for AA 

and UA oxidation (in the absence of NOR) occurred at 2 mV and 266 mV, respectively. 

 

Table 1. The analytical performance of various modified electrodes in terms of detection limit, sensitivity and method 

employed for NOR quantification. 

________________________________________________________________________ 

Modified   DL Sensitivity           Method               Ref.  

Electrode   (M) (A/M) 

________________________________________________________________________ 

PDAN/GCE    1.82 0.012  DPV  [41] 

Ppy/b-CD-ME   0.80 0.050  SWV  [42] 

BHa and TiO2 NPs  0.50 0.199  DPV  [43] 

Poly(Glutamic acid) MCPE 0.43 0.094  DPV  [44] 

CACE/GCE   0.28 0.044  DPV  [45] 

MWNTs-ZnO/Ch-SPE  0.20 0.059  SWV  [46] 

Poly(Cresol Red)/GCE   0.20 0.156  DPV  [47] 

AuNPS.Ptyr/GCE   0.13 0.119  DPV  Present 

________________________________________________________________________ 

 

A potential distance of 190 mV from AA and 74 mV from UA is adequate to overcome any possible overlap of 

anodic peaks of the three species. Moreover, the adsorption capacity of the electrode surface materials is capable of 

assembling all molecules and their byproducts indicating a robust and reactive sensor. A close scrutiny of the linear 

plot, (Ip) vs [NOR], given in Figure 8(B), demonstrates that the slope of (0.1015 A/M) is consistent with that in the 

absence of AA and UA (shown above in the insert of Figure 7) which is evidence of good reproducibility and the 

stability of the present sensor. Moreover, the calculated detection limit (DL3) was 0.142 M (24 ppb). The reliability 

and sensitivity of the present electrochemical system were tested for the determination of NOR in drug and blood 

plasma samples using a DPV method as described above in section 2.4. The average recovery percentage (n = 3) of 

NOR listed in Table 2 was obtained by conversion the DPV peak current into [NOR] using the regression data 

illustrated in Figure 8(B). The minimum (95%) and maximum (101%) of reported percentages under the present 

experimental conditions describe the extent of reactivity and analytical performance of the sensor developed for 

sensitive NOR determination.  

 

 

 
 



EMAD A. KHUDAISH and ARWA AL-MASKARI 

 

18 

 

 
 

Figure 8. (A) DPV current responses for selective determination of NOR in the presence of 250 M [AA] and 50 M 

[UA] at AuNPs.Ptyr-GCE (v = 50 mV/s) in PBS (pH = 7.4) recorded for a range of [NOR]; (a) 0.5, (b) 1, (c) 1.5, (d) 2, 

(e) 3, (f) 4, (g) 5, (h) 6, (i) 8, (j) 10, (k) 13, (l) 16, (m) 19, (n) 22, and (o) 25 M. Insert is the DPV response in the 

absence of NOR. (B) The linear relationship of Ip vs [NOR] of the original DPV data presented in Figure 8 (A).   

 

 

Table 2. The recovery percentage of NOR in pharmaceutical ampoule and plasma blood samples. 

______________________________________________________________________________  

[Actual]  [Found]  RSD
(a)

  Recovery 

Samples (M)   (M)   (%) 

______________________________________________________________________________ 

Ampoule 

(1)    0.591  0.565  0.021    95.6 

(2)    1.182  1.150  0.027    97.3 

(3)    2.364  2.327  0.035  98.4 

(4)    4.728  4.783  0.028  101.2 

(5)    9.456  9.464  0.019  100.1 

Plasma 

(1)    0.00  N.D.    ------ 

(2)    0.50  0.475  0.017  95.0 

(3)    1.00  0.956  0.026  95.6 

(4)    3.00  2.980  0.029  99.3 

(5)    6.00  6.092  0.034  101.5 

(6)    9.00  9.068  0.034  100.8 

______________________________________________________________________________ 

(a) Relative Standard Deviation (n = 3).    

 

 

The electrochemical stability of the developed sensor in the last injection of NOR (25 M) NOR in the presence 

of (250M AA) and (50 M UA) was verified by DPV repetitive scanning for 12 runs with 5 min intervals. The 

anodic peak potential of NOR oxidation was consistently obtained at 192 mV and decreased negligibly with 

subsequent runs to approach 2.6% of its maxima in the last run, suggesting a reliable and stable sensor for selective 

NOR quantification in real samples.  

4.   Conclusion 

This paper describes an approach for the fabrication of a solid-state sensor based on electrochemical 

polymerization of tyramine (Ptyr) film onto the surface of a glassy carbon electrode (GCE) followed by a drop casting 

of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). The as-prepared surface materials (AuNPs, Ptyr-GCE) were characterized using 

surface image spectroscopy and electrochemical methods. These comprehensive investigative methods explore 

properties of the built up surface materials such as composition and structure, resistivity and reactivity, and analytical 



A SURFACE NETWORK BASED ON POLYTYRAMINE/GOLD NANOPARTICLES 

19 

 

performance. The proposed sensor was tested for norepinephrine (NOR) determination in an artificial sample at which 

the limit of detection was brought down to 0.130 M. The sensor excellently passed the selectivity test in the presence 

of excess concentrations of electro-active biological interference agents such as ascorbic acid (AA) and uric acid (UA). 

Moreover, the sensor’s performance was substantiated practically for NOR determination in a drug formulation and in 

plasma blood samples with satisfactory recovery percentages. 

Conflict of interest 

The authors declare no conflict of interest. 

Acknowledgement 

The authors would like to thank Sultan Qaboos University (SQU), Sultanate of Oman, for supporting this work 

by the research grant number (IG/SCI/CHEM/18/01). Many thanks to Sultan Qaboos University Hospital (SQUH) for 

providing a NOR injection ampoule and plasma blood sample. 

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Received   7 September 2020    

Accepted   20 January 2021