Use of floating electrodes in transient isotachophoresis to increase the sensitivity of detection
- 23 April 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) in Lab on a Chip
- Vol. 3 (2) , 86-92
- https://doi.org/10.1039/b212729f
Abstract
We report a protocol for on-chip electrophoretic sample loading and sample component separation in which each operation requires simultaneous control of the potential of only two electrodes: during the sample-loading phase, the potentials at the ends of the separation channel are electrically floating; during electrophoresis of the sample mixture down the separation channel, the potentials at the ends of the sample-introduction channel are floating. This method, which we call “floating-stacking,” avoids the dispersion/distortion of the sample plug that is commonly associated with simultaneous electrical control of only two electrodes in a crossed-channel or offset-double-tee injection system. Further, when this floating loading/separation is done in the presence of back-transient-isotachophoresis, sample loss from the plug of material being injected is minimal and a significant concentration increase—up to 13×—of the sample components in the separated bands occurs relative to the commonly used “pinch-and-pull-back” technique (which requires simultaneous electrical control of four electrodes).Keywords
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