We report an approach
for the online coupling of digital microfluidics
(DMF) with mass spectrometry (MS) using a chip-integrated microspray
hole (μSH). The technique uses an adapted electrostatic spray
ionization (ESTASI) method to spray a portion of a sample droplet
through a microhole in the cover plate, allowing its chemical content
to be analyzed by MS. This eliminates the need for chip disassembly
or the introduction of capillary emitters for MS analysis, as required
by state-of-the-art. For the first time, this allows the essential
advantage of a DMF devicefree droplet movementto be
retained during MS analysis. The broad applicability of the developed
seamless coupling of DMF and mass spectrometry was successfully applied
to the study of various on-chip organic syntheses as well as protein
and peptide analysis. In the case of a Hantzsch synthesis, we were
able to show that the method is very well suited for monitoring even
rapid chemical reactions that are completed in a few seconds. In addition,
the strength of the low resource consumption in such on-chip microsyntheses
was demonstrated by the example of enzymatic brominations, for which
only a minute amount of a special haloperoxidase is required in the
droplet. The unique selling point of this approach is that the analyzed
droplet remains completely movable after the MS measurement and is
available for subsequent on-DMF chip processes. This is illustrated
here for the example of MS analysis of the starting materials in the
corresponding droplets before they are combined to investigate the
reaction progress by DMF-MS further. This technology enables the ongoing
and almost unlimited tracking of multistep chemical processes in a
DMF chip and offers exciting prospects for transforming digital microfluidics
into automated synthesis platforms.
There is a constant need for the development of easy-to-operate systems for the rapid and unambiguous identification of bacterial pathogens in drinking water without the requirement for time-consuming culture processes. In this study, we present a disposable and lowcost lab-on-a-chip device utilizing a nanoporous membrane, which connects two stacked perpendicular microfluidic channels. Whereas one of the channels supplies the sample, the second one attracts it by potential-driven forces. Surface-enhanced Raman spectrometry (SERS) is employed as a reliable detection method for bacteria identification. To gain the effect of surface enhancement, silver nanoparticles were added to the sample. The pores of the membrane act as a filter trapping the bodies of microorganisms as well as clusters of nanoparticles creating suitable conditions for sensitive SERS detection. Therein, we focused on the construction and characterization of the device performance. To demonstrate the functionality of the microfluidic chip, we analyzed common pathogens (Escherichia coli DH5α and Pseudomonas taiwanensis VLB120) from spiked tap water using the optimized experimental parameters. The obtained results confirmed our system to be promising for the construction of a disposable optical platform for reliable and rapid pathogen detection which couples their electrokinetic concentration on the integrated nanoporous membrane with SERS detection.
By the on-chip integration of a droplet generator in front of an emitter tip, droplets of non-polar solvents are generated in a free jet of an aqueous matrix. When an IR laser irradiates this free liquid jet consisting of water as the continuous phase and the non-polar solvent as the dispersed droplet phase, the solutes in the droplets are ionized. This ionization at atmospheric pressure enables the mass spectrometric analysis of non-polar compounds with the aid of a surrounding aqueous matrix that absorbs IR light. This works both for non-polar solvents such as n-heptane and for water non-miscible solvents like chloroform. In a proof of concept study, this approach is applied to monitor a photooxidation of N-phenyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline.
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