Some basic aspects of capillary electrophoresis (CE) separations on a poly(methyl methacrylate) chip provided with two separation channels in the column-coupling (CC) configuration and on-column conductivity detectors were studied. The CE methods employed in this study included isotachophoresis (ITP), capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE), and CZE with on-line ITP sample pretreatment (ITP-CZE). Hydrodynamic and electroosmotic flows of the solution in the separation compartment of the chip were suppressed, and electrophoresis was a dominant transport process in the separations performed by these methods. Very reproducible migration velocities of the separated constituents were typical under such transport conditions, and consequently, test analytes could be quantified by various ITP techniques with 1-2% RSD. The CC configuration of the separation channels provides means for an effective combination of an enhanced load capacity of the separation system with high detection sensitivities for the analytes in concentration-cascade ITP separations. In this way, for example, succinate, acetate, and benzoate could be separated also in instances when they were present in the loaded sample (1.2 microL) at 1 mmol/L concentrations while their limits of detection ranged from 8 to 12 micromol/L concentrations. A well-defined ITP concentration of the analyte(s) combined with an in-column sample cleanup (via an electrophoretically driven removal of the matrix constituents from the separation compartment) can be integrated into the separations performed on the CC chip. These sample pretreatment capabilities were investigated in ITP-CZE separations of model samples in which nitrite, phosphate, and fluoride (each at a 10 micromol/L concentration) accompanied matrix constituents (sulfate and chloride) at considerably higher concentrations. Here, both the concentration of the analytes and cleanup of the sample were included in the ITP separation in the first separation channel while the second separation channel served for the CZE separation of the ITP pretreated sample and the detection of the analytes.
Analysis of the beta-blockers oxprenolol, atenolol, timolol, propranolol, metoprolol, and acebutolol in human urine by a combination of isotachophoresis (ITP) and zone electrophoresis (ZE) was investigated. Methods were developed with a conventional capillary electrophoresis (CE) apparatus and a poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) microchip system. With CE the separation of oxprenolol, atenolol, timolol, and acebutolol from a standard solution containing 5 microg/mL of each compound was accomplished by performing ZE with transient ITP. The electrolyte system consisted of 10 mM sodium morpholinoethane sulfonate (pH 5.5) and 0.1% methylhydroxyethylcellulose as the leading electrolyte and 30 mM ortho-phosphoric acid (pH 2.0) as both the terminating and the ZE background electrolyte. With the microchip system the separation of oxprenolol and acebutolol from a standard solution containing 10 microg/mL of each compound was accomplished by a coupled-channel ITP-ZE device using the same leading electrolyte solution as the CE system but 5 mM glutamic acid (pH 3.4) as terminating and background electrolytes. The systems were used for analyses of patient urine samples. Water-soluble hydrophilic matrix compounds were removed from the urine samples by solid-phase extraction (SPE). Limits of quantification below 5 microg/mL could be achieved. The PMMA ITP-ZE chip has not earlier been used for analyses of any drugs from urine samples.
Conductivity detection is one of the most often employed means of detection in isotachophoresis. In microanalytical devices, thin-film platinum electrodes can be used for conductivity detection and for other electrochemical methods of detection. The design and the performance of different electrode geometries for on-column contact conductivity detection with thin-film platinum electrodes integrated on an isotachophoresis PMMA-microchip is described. Three different electrode geometries for direct conductivity detection were used for the investigation of isotachophoretic separations. The influence of the width of the electrodes and their positioning relative to the separation channel was investigated. The performance of the different detectors is compared for the analysis of organic carboxylic acid anions.
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