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Öğe New voltammetric strategy for determination and electrochemical behaviors of metformin by pencil graphite electrode in the NaOH(Indian Chemical Society, 2020) Altunkaynak, Yalçın; Yavuz, Ömer; Levent, AbdulkadirMetformin(MET), an oral antidiabetic drug commonly used in the treatment of diabetes, is a drug that increases insulin sensitivity in the biguanide group [1]. MET shows its pharmacological effect by lowering the glucose level in the blood. In the literature research, there are studies using electrochemical techniques for the analysis of MET in biological fluid and drug forms[1-6]. In this study, the electrochemical properties of MET, one of the drugs used in the treatment of diabetes, were performed using a pencil graphite electrode in NaOH (0.1 M) solution. This compound was recorded with an irreversible and diffusion controlled adsorption oxidation peak at approximately +1.28 V by cyclic voltammetry. With square wave stripping voltammetry, it was observed that the peak current signals of MET in the concentration range of 2.76-24.8 µM in 0.1M NaOH solution increased linearly. At a concentration of 2.76 µM (n = 9), the limit of detection and relative standard deviation were calculated as 9.03 nM (1.495 ngmL-1 ) and 3.25 %, respectively. This method has been successfully applied for MET analysis in pharmaceutical preparations and urine samples without any separation.Öğe Electrochemical determination of melatonin hormone using a boron-doped diamond electrode(Elsevier, 2012-01) Levent, AbdulkadirIn this study, a boron-doped diamond electrode was used for the electroanalytical determination of melatonin in the pharmaceutical tablet and urine samples by square-wave voltammetry. Melatonin yielded a well-defined voltammetric response in Britton-Robinson buffer, pH 3.0 at + 0.88 V (vs. Ag/AgCl). Using the optimal square-wave voltammetry conditions, the oxidation peak was used to determine melatonin in the concentration range of 5.0 × 107 M to 4.0 × 106 M (r = 0.998, n = 8), a detection limit of 1.1 × 107 M (0.025 μg/mL) and relative standard deviation was 2.06% at the 2.0 × 106 M level (n = 10). Recoveries of melatonin were in the range of 97.67–105%, for both tablet and spiked human urine samples.