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Free keywords:
chiral amines; chiral separation; fluorescence detection; microchip electrophoresis; variable wavelength
Abstract:
A modular instrument for high-speed microchip electrophoresis (MCE) equipped with a sensitive variable-wavelength fluorescence detection system was developed and evaluated. The experimental setup consists mainly of a lamp-based epifluorescence microscope for variable-wavelength fluorescence detection and imaging and a programmable four-channel bipolar high-voltage source capable of delivering up to +/- 10 W per channel. The optical unit was equipped with a high-sensitivity photomultiplier tube and an adjustable aperture. The system was applied to MCE separations of flurescein isothiocyanate (FITC)- labelled amines utilizing blue light (450-480 nm) for excitation as well as for the separation of rhodamines utilizing excitation light in the green spectral region (531- 560 nm). At optimized conditions baseline separation of four FITC-labelled amines could be obtained in less than 50 s at a detection limit of 460 ppt (1 nM) with a signal-to-noise ratio of 3:1. Three rhodamines could be baseline-separated in less than 6 s at a detection limit of 240 ppt (500 pm). The relative standard deviations of absolute migration times determined in repetitive MCE separations of FITC-labelled amines were below 2.5% (n= 25). By the application of cyclodextrin-modified electrolytes, chiral separation of FITC-labelled amines could be performed in seconds demonstrating the potential of microchip electrophoresis for chiral high-throughput screening.