Miniaturized biochemical devices in glass, silicon and polymer materials are starting to find their way from the academic laboratories to real-life applications. However, most attention has been given to miniaturize the downstream functions of various microfluidic systems, leaving the sample introduction and preparation steps to more conventional, bulkier solutions. For point-of-care diagnostics in particular, it becomes crucial to be able to handle complex human samples in a miniaturized format.In this work, we report on a microsystem for on-chip sample preparation that is able to remove blood cells from whole blood. The hybrid system consists of a commercially available membrane filter incorporated into a poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) casted device. Membrane materials were evaluated on the bases of low nonspecific adsorption of free and protein-bound testosterone as analyte substance. The hybrid system including a hydrophilic polypropylene filter successfully removed blood cells from diluted human whole blood. Surface oxidation was sufficient to make the plasma filtrate flow through the membrane filter and the channel system by capillary force alone and thus no external pumping source was needed.
The influence of the separation voltage on end column electrochemical detection (EC) in capillary electrophoresis (CE) has been investigated using an electrochemical detector chip based on an array of microband electrodes. It is shown, both theoretically and experimentally, that the effect of the CE electric field on the detection can be practically eliminated, without using a decoupler, by positioning the reference electrode sufficiently close to the working electrode. In the present study, this was demonstrated by using an experimental setup in which neighboring microband electrodes on a chip, positioned 30 microns from the end of the CE capillary, were used as working and reference electrodes, respectively. The short distance (i.e., 10 microns) between the working and reference electrode ensured that both of the electrodes were very similarly affected by the presence of the CE electric field. With this experimental setup, no significant influence of the CE voltage on the peak potentials for gold oxide reduction could be seen for CE voltages up to +30 kV. The detector noise level was also found to be reduced.
A new potentiostatless detection scheme for amperometric detection in capillary electrophoresis is presented based on the use of microband array electrodes positioned in the capillary electrophoresis electric field. In the present study, the spatial potential difference in the CE separation high-voltage field was measured using two gold microband electrodes positioned in the proximity of the capillary outlet. The induced potential difference between the two electrodes was recorded as a function of the applied separation high voltage and the dependence of the electrochemically generated current on the high-voltage field, and the concentration of a redox couple (Fe(CN)6(4-)/Fe(CN)6(3-)) was investigated. The results show that plots of the generated current versus the CE separation voltage have the same shape as cyclic voltammograms obtained with the same electrodes in a traditional potentiostatic setup and that the current is proportional to the concentration of the redox couple. As a decoupling device is not needed, the described potentiostatless approach significantly simplifies the instrumental setup for amperometric detection. This approach consequently holds great promise for application in inexpensive portable chip-based CE devices.
Chronoamperometry (CA) and cyclic voltammetry (CV) were used to compare the electrochemical behavior of metal, polymer and graphite coated nanospray emitters. It is shown that electrochemical reactions occurring at the emitter surface limit the lifetime of the noble metal coated nanospray emitters while the graphite coated nanospray emitters show good electrochemical stabilities. Although the surface of the graphite coated emitters may be passivated at positive potentials, the conductive coating is not lost as for the noble metal coated nanospray emitters. The graphite coated nanospray emitters still produced a stable nanospray signal despite the presence of a passivated surface. The polymer (i.e. polyaniline) coated nanospray emitters showed very low electrochemical activity and could not be thoroughly tested by CA. The relative short lifetimes seen in the electrochemical tests are qualitatively comparable with those obtained in nanospray experiments, in which only the outmost tip of the emitter is electrochemically active. However, the electrochemical stress during CA far exceeds the stress during ESI, which implies that CA can be used to perform quick and simple estimates of emitter stabilities. To our knowledge, this is the first time the electrochemical behavior of metal, polymer and graphite coated nanospray emitters has been compared.
A method for coupling an electrophoretic driven separation to a liquid flow, using conventional fused-silica capillaries and a soft polymeric interface is presented. A novel design of the electrode providing high voltage to the electrophoretic separation was also developed. The electrode consisted of a conductive polyimide/graphite imbedded coating immobilized onto the capillary electrophoresis (CE) column inlet. This integrated electrode gave the same separation performance as a commonly used platinum electrode. The on-column electrode also showed good electrochemical stability in chronoamperometric experiments. In addition, with this electrode design, the electrode position relative to the inlet end of the CE column will always be constant and well defined. The on-line flow injection analysis (FIA)-CE system was used with electrospray ionization (ESI)-time of flight (TOF)-mass spectrometry detection. The preparation of the PDMS (poly(dimethylsiloxane)) interface for FIA-CE is described in detail and used for initial tests of the on-column polymer-imbedded graphite inlet electrode. In this interface, a pressure-driven liquid flow, a make up CE electrolyte and a CE column inlet meet in a two-level cross (95 microm ID) in the PDMS structure, enabling independent flow characterization.
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