4.5 Article

The Use of a 3D-printed Microfluidic Device and Pressure Mobilization for Integrating Capillary Electrophoresis with Electrochemical Detection

Journal

ELECTROANALYSIS
Volume 30, Issue 10, Pages 2241-2249

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/elan.201800367

Keywords

3D printing; capillary electrophoresis; amperometric detection

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R15GM084470-04]
  2. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [R15GM084470] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Capillary electrophoresis coupled with electrochemical detection can be a powerful analysis tool; however, previous methods developed to integrate these two techniques can often times be fragile and have alignment issues such that there are no commercially available approaches. In this paper, we present the use of a 3D-printed Wall-Jet Electrode device for integrating capillary electrophoresis with electrochemical detection. A pressure mobilization step was also utilized to further reduce noise by allowing the electrophoresis separation step to continue only until the first analyte was close to elution. Then, the separation voltage was terminated and pressure-based flow was used for elution of the analyte bands onto the electrode surface with a wall-jet configuration. It is shown that the pressure-based elution is beneficial for the reduction of baseline noise and elimination of field effects. A mixture of catecholamines were separated to demonstrate effectiveness of the system. In addition, the system was coupled with a Beckman Coulter commercial capillary electrophoresis instrument in a straightforward manner. The system was also shown to be effective in separations done with a high ionic strength physiological buffer. This 3D printing approach can be used by researchers to utilize electrochemical detection on commercial capillary electrophoresis systems by downloading the provided STL and/or CAD files.

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