modified electrodes are different from other types of electrodes as they have a molecularmonolayer or micrometers-thick layers of film made from a certain chemical. The thin film is coated on the surface of the electrode. The outcome would be a modified electrode with special new chemical properties in terms of physical, chemical, electrochemical, optical, electrical, transport, and other useful properties. Chemically modified electrodes and electrodes in general heavily depend on electron transport: A general term for electrochemical processes where the charge transports through the chemical films to the electrode. The term is used to express the area-normalized in mol/m^2 of a specific type of chemical site in the thin chemical film in on the surface of the chemically modified electrode.
Purpose of developing chemically modified electrodes
In their first stages, chemically modified electrodes were merely applied in technologies they were initially made for. After that, chemically modified electrodes provided powerful routes to tune the performance of electrodes. The modification of electrodes facilitated the following processes in electroanalytical chemistry:
The research fields where chemically modified electrodes are used include: ;Basic electrochemical investigations:Electron transfer between electrodes and electrolytes. ;Electrostaticity on electrode surfaces::wikt:stationary|Stationary or slow electric charges. ;Polymer electron transport and ionic transport:Movement of electrons from one species or atom to another, with a special focus on polymers - large molecules with duplicated structural units. ;Design of electrochemical systems and devices:The creation of systems and devices that use chemically modified electrodes with all the required specifications of the systems or devices.
Approaches to chemically modify electrodes
The surface of electrodes can be modified in the following ways: ; Adsorption : A method that uses the same kind of valence forces involved in formation of chemical compounds, where the film is strongly adsorbed, or chemisorbed, onto the surface of the electrode, yielding monolayer coverage. This approach involves substrate-coupled self-assembled monolayers, where molecules are spontaneously chemisorbed to the surface of the electrode, resulting in a microscopic superlattice structure of layers formed on it. ; Covalent bonding: A method that uses chemical agents to create a covalent bond between one or more monomolecular layers of the chemical modifier and the electrode surface. The common agents to use in this method include organosilanes and cyanuric chloride. ; Polymer film coating: A method that uses one of the following to hold electron-conductive and nonconductive polymer films on the electrode surface:
Chemisorption and low solubility in the contacting solution
This method includes removing chemical species from self-assembled monolayers to allow adsorbing molecules on the electrode surface independently of the original substrate structure. The polymer films can be organic, organometallic or inorganic, and it can either contain the chemical modifier or have the chemical added to the polymer in a latter process. ; Composite: A method that has the chemical modifier mixed with an electrode matrix material. An example for this method is having an electron-transfermediator mixed with carbon particles in a carbon paste electrode. Carbon paste, glassy carbon paste, glassy carbon etc. electrodes when modified are termed as chemically modified electrodes. Chemically modified electrodes have been employed for the analysis of organic and inorganic species.