In this work, the ion-transfer voltammetric detection of the protonated beta-blocker propranolol in artificial saliva is presented. Cyclic voltammetry, differential pulse voltammetry, and differential pulse stripping voltammetry (DPSV) were employed in the detection of the cationic drug based on ion-transfer voltammetry across arrays of microinterfaces between artificial saliva and an organogel phase. It was found that the artificial saliva matrix decreased the available potential window for ion-transfer voltammetry at this liquid|liquid interface but transfer of protonated propranolol was still achieved. The DPSV method employed a preconditioning step as well as a preconcentration step followed by analytical signal generation based on the back-transfer of the drug across the array of microinterfaces. The DPSV peak current response was linear with drug concentration in the artificial saliva matrix over the concentration range of 0.05-1 microM (i(p) = -8.13 (nA microM(-1))(concentration) + 0.07 (nA), R = 0.9929, n = 7), and the calculated detection limit (3s(b)) was 0.02 microM. These results demonstrate that DPSV at arrays of liquid|liquid microinterfaces is a viable analytical approach for pharmaceutical determinations in biomimetic matrixes.
The electrochemistry of a series of dendrimers was examined at the interface between two immiscible electrolyte solutions (ITIES), enabling study of non-redox-active dendrimers. Different generations of poly(propylenimine) (DAB-AM-n) and poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers were studied. In their protonated states, the dendrimers were transferred across the ITIES, with the electrochemical behavior observed depending on the dendrimer family, the generation number, and the experimental pH. The electrochemistry of the lower generations studied was characterized by well-defined peaks for both dendrimer families and with small peak-peak separations in the case of the PAMAM family. The voltammetry of the higher generations was more complex, showing distorted voltammograms and instability of the interface. The charges of the transferring dendrimers were calculated by convolution of the voltammetric data and were similar to the theoretical charges for DAB-AM-n. For PAMAM, only the lowest generation exhibited reversible behavior, with higher generations having irreversible behavior. Using cyclic voltammetry, low micromolar concentrations of the dendrimers were detected. The results show that electrochemistry at the ITIES can be a useful method for characterization of ionizable dendrimers and that voltammetry can be a simple method for detection of low concentrations of these multicharged species.
Electrochemically modulated liquid-liquid extraction (EMLLE) enables the selective extraction and separation of ions from mixtures by choice of an applied interfacial potential difference. The extraction of ionized drugs from artificial urine is reported in this paper. The artificial urine matrix was characterized by cyclic voltammetry at the interface between two immiscible electrolyte solutions (ITIES), showing that components of that aqueous phase truncate the available potential window at the ITIES. The transfer of three cationic drugs from aqueous artificial urine to the 1,2-dichloroethane organic electrolyte phase was examined. Both propranolol and timolol were found to transfer across the artificial urine-organic interface. However, sotalol transfer was not possible within the available potential window. Extraction of propranolol and timolol from artificial urine into an organogel phase, by electrochemically modulated liquid-liquid extraction, was examined. The application of potentials positive of the drugs' formal transfer potentials enabled the selective extraction of both propranolol and timolol, with a higher potential being required for timolol. This work demonstrates the practical utility of EMLLE for the selective extraction of target compounds from a complex sample matrix.
A microfluidic device is presented with offchip electrodes residing in a reservoir and connected via micro-capillaries to the Y-shaped microfluidic channel. The device is tested by potentiometric measurements involving dual-stream laminar flow of two aqueous solutions carrying different electrolytes at various concentrations. Open circuit potentials are measured for a series of solutions of alkali metal chlorides and tetraalkylammonium chlorides as well as for dilute hydrochloric acid. The open circuit potential for the microfluidic chip was calculated by taking into account the diffusion potential at finite ionic strength as well as the potential difference introduced by the reference electrode system. The liquid junction potential developed at the boundary of the co-flowing aqueous solutions may be manipulated to have greater or lesser relative contributions to the measured open circuit potential based on use of electrolyte salts having cation and anion pairs of similar or dissimilar mobilities in solution. A reasonable agreement between theoretical and experimental values of the open circuit potential is observed for these situations. The results show that simple microfluidic structures possess a rich environment for exploration and application of the solution chemistry of ions.
The use of electrochemistry and electrical behavior as a control and manipulation factor in analyte extractions is reviewed. Electromodulated extractions of ionic and neutral analytes are possible using this general approach. Extractions based on solid-liquid, liquid-liquid and membrane behaviors have been demonstrated and reported together with analyte extractions from real matrices and interfacing with instrumental detection methods. The electromodulation strategy offers great opportunities for selectivity in sample preparation.
The laminar flow regime prevailing in pressure-driven flow through a Y-shaped microfluidic channel was utilized to create a stable boundary between two aqueous liquids. Transverse transport of ions between these two liquids gave rise to a diffusion potential, which was monitored by measurement of the open circuit potential. In this report, the influence on the cross-channel potential distribution of protonation reactions occurring in the boundary zone between the two co-flowing liquids is presented. The proton source was present in one of the co-flowing streams, and an uncharged proton acceptor was present in the other aqueous stream. The time-dependent transport equation for diffusion and migration was augmented by chemical reaction terms and was solved for all species present in both streams as a theoretical basis for the analysis. Within this model, the system was assumed to be homogeneous along the channel height, and effects of nonuniform velocity profiles were neglected. A reduction in potential by several millivolts was predicted for a protonation reaction occurring close to the boundary between the two aqueous streams, provided that the mobility of the protonated species was lower than the mobility of the co-cation in the background electrolyte (alkali metal cation in this case). The magnitude of the decrease in the potential was greater for protonated molecules with lower mobility or if the mobility of the background electrolyte cation was increased. Experimental results are presented for imidazole and D-histidine as proton acceptors present in 10 mM KCl, 10 mM NaCl, or 10 mM CsCl solution and co-flowing with a stream of 10 mM hydrochloric acid, which served as the proton source. Decreases in measured potential, in line with the predicted diminished potential, were obtained.
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