A contactless capacitively coupled conductivity detector for capillary electrophoresis is introduced. The detector consists of two electrodes which are placed cylindrically around the outer polyimide coating of the fused-silica capillary with a detection gap of 2 mm. The electrodes form a cylindrical capacitor, and the electric conductivity of the solution in the gap between the electrodes is measured. A high audio or low ultrasonic frequency for coupling of the ac voltage is used in order to minimize the influence of reactance of the liquid. For an improved version of the detector, two syringe cannulas are used as the electrodes and the capillary is simply assembled into the tubing. This allows an easy placement of the detector on various positions along the capillary. The limit of detection of inorganic cations and anions is 200 ppb, as determined for sodium and chloride, respectively.
Capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detection (C(4)D) has become an accepted detection method in capillary electrophoresis (CE) for a variety of analytes. Advantages of this technique over optical detection modes and galvanic contact conductivity detection include great flexibility in capillary handling and rather simple mechanical parts and electronics, as it can be performed in an on-capillary mode. Furthermore, the detection principle can be used with capillaries made of other materials than fused silica (PEEK, Teflon), with chip-based separation technologies, or with capillaries having very small inner diameters. This review presents a discussion of the published literature on C(4)D for CE and capillary electrochromatography.
Capillary electrophoresis and conductometry represent a combination of a high-resolution separation method with a sensitive detection principle for the analysis of ionic species. In this paper, results are reported that are obtained with a contactless conductivity detector. This device works without a galvanic contact of the electrolyte and the electrodes. The conductivity sensor is based on two metal tubes that act as cylindrical capacitors. These electrodes are both placed around a fused-silica capillary with a detection gap of 1 mm left in between. When a high audio or low ultrasonic oscillation frequency between 40 and 100 kHz is applied to one of the electrodes, a signal is produced as soon as an analyte zone with a different conductivity compared to the background electrolyte passes the detection gap. An amplifier and rectifier is connected to the other electrode where the signal is further processed. Limits of detection for lithium and fluoride are 4 and 13 ppb, respectively, with a linear range over 4 orders of magnitude from 90 ppb up to more than 1000 ppm for both anions and cations. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that for species with lower equivalent conductivities, such as organic ions, indirect conductivity detection is a sensitive alternative to indirect optical detection methods. Limits of detection of 50 ppb and below are obtained for organic acids.
A number of small inorganic anions and cations were separated after injection of the sample into both ends of a separation capillary. The ions were detected using a capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detector (CCCCD) which could be placed at various positions along the capillary length. Counter-directional migration of anions and cations occurs towards the detector, which is placed at an appropriate position along the capillary so that the migration order is determined by the respective effective separation capillary lengths for both anions and cations. As the CCCCD detector can be easily moved to any position along the capillary, virtually any effective separation length can be attained. Depending on the number of analytes in the sample, one can choose to obtain either electropherograms with inter-migrating zones of cations and anions or separations with distinct regions of anion and cation zones, respectively. A new term 'apparent separation selectivity' is introduced to describe the manner in which the position of the detector can be varied in order to determine the final separation.
A miniaturized capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detector (mini-C(4)D) cell has been designed which is small enough to allow it to slide along the effective capillary length inside the capillary cassette of an Agilent capiillary electrophoresis system (CE) (or other CE brand of similar construction), including the possibility of positioning it close to the point of optical detection (4 cm), or even putting two such detector cells in one cassette. The cell was tested and the performance characteristics (noise, sensitivity, and peak width) were compared with those obtained with the previously used large C(4)D cell. No significant differences were observed. The mini-C(4)D was used in simultaneous separations of common cations and anions where its advantage over a larger C(4)D cell is the ability to vary the point of detection with the mini-C(4)D cell continuously at any point along the capillary length, so that the optimum apparent selectivity can be chosen. Other applications include providing a convenient second point of detection in addition to photometric detection, such as to measure accurately the linear velocity of a zone, or to allow placement of two mini-C(4)D cells in one capillary cassette simultaneously.
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