A Guide to Recognizing Your Electrochemical Impedance Spectra: Revisions of the Randles Circuit in (Bio)sensing

Author

Lazanas, Alexandros

Prieto Simón, Beatriz

Publication date

2025-10-09



Abstract

Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) is a highly versatile electrochemical technique capable of discretizing each electrochemical parameter in complex systems by employing a broad frequency spectrum. When EIS is employed in (bio)sensing applications, the electrochemical parameters are usually fitted into a relatively limited equivalent circuit model regardless of the system at hand. This work thoroughly discusses the meaning of each physical parameter in the Randles circuit, the most common equivalent circuit to model (bio)sensing systems based on EIS transduction. Additionally, it pinpoints the most suitable modifications to the Randles circuit for modern-day electrodes, where coatings of non-biological and/or biological materials can radically impact the measured impedance compared to that of unmodified electrodes. The discussion is supported by simulations that clearly exhibit the effect of each examined parameter, providing guidance for experimentalists to improve the accuracy of their work.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

CDU Subject

54 - Chemistry. Crystallography. Mineralogy

Subject

Química

Pages

17 p.

Publisher

MDPI

Grant Agreement Number

Severo Ochoa Excellence Accreditation CEX2024-001469-S and project grant PID2021-124867OB-I00, funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by “ERDF A way of making Europe”

CERCA Program/Generalitat de Catalunya

AGAUR (2021 SGR 00223)

Documents

sensors-25-06260-v2.pdf

1.716Mb

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Attribution 4.0 International

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Papers [1240]