The use of carrier ampholyte-free IEF (CAF-IEF) with ITP mobilization and conductivity detection in ITP mode for preconcentration and analysis of amino acids is demonstrated. The analytical procedure consists of three subsequent steps. In the first step, amino acids are continuously dosed from an infinite volume reservoir by electromigration to the column, where a sharp, stationary neutralization reaction boundary (NRB) is created in between acidic and basic primary electrolyte. Here, amino acids are selectively focused (trapped), if their pI falls to the pH difference on both sides of the NRB (pH gap). Amino acids create sharp rectangular zones, arranged according to their pI values. In the second step, focused zones are mobilized. After accumulation of the detectable amount of amino acids, dosing electrolyte in the infinite volume reservoir is changed for the mobilizing electrolyte. The migration mode is changed from CAF-IEF to ITP and substances start to migrate toward the analytical capillary. In the third step, analytes are transferred into the analytical column equipped with a conductivity detector and are detected in the new leading electrolyte in an ITP migration mode. The presented CAF-IEF-ITP-ITP with time-dependent accumulation of the large-volume sample enables to achieve in a reasonable time a 100 times lower c-LOD (here in orders of nmol/L), than can be reached by conventional hyphenated ITP-ITP.
The paper provides information about the on-line monitoring of components analysed by capillary electrophoresis. For this purposes we developed a whole-capillary transverse scanning detection system, which helps to improve and control the separation processes. A picture from a colour line scanner was used as a source of basic information for autonomous control of the separation process by regulation of the high voltage source. The application and algorithms for machine vision were designed in the progressive graphic development system LabVIEW. Real-time control of the separation process was implemented in a compact control process logic controller. The performance of the detection system was evaluated and the function of the overall system was tested by performing isotachophoretic analysis of a model mixture.
An online method involving transient electrokinetic dosing and ITP with neutralization reaction boundary (NRB) and/or carrier ampholyte-free isoelectric focusing (CAF IEF) was developed for the preconcentration, preseparation, and analytical determination of glyphosate in aqueous samples containing low concentrations of the analyte of interest. Various parameters were investigated in the framework of an optimization study with the aim of achieving the maximum concentration limit of detection (cLOD) decrease in minimum time. The proposed method used CAF IEF and/or ITP with NRB. The sample was dosed to the column on the stationary reaction boundary (CAF IEF) and/or moving reaction boundary (ITP with NRB), whereat a sharp pH step exists. Here, charge reversal was due to the ampholytes, and/or acid accumulation occurred because of charge loss. Similarly, the accumulated sample was mobilized with TE and analyzed using classical ITP in the second analytical column. Glyphosate (GLY), the analyte of interest, was chosen as a model substance for ITP with NRB and preconcentration as well as focusing preconcentration and CAF IEF using the asymmetric purpose-built NRB. On one side of the asymmetric boundary was the zone of acidic pH; while the opposite side comprised a neutral/basic non-conductive zone of the ampholyte-in this case, GLY. Such an arrangement enables the use of a lower pH on the acidic side, which allows the focusing of strongly acidic ampholytes and the accumulation of weak acids. The electrolyte composition and the dosing time were optimized, and a 14-fold accumulation was achieved in 25 min compared to that by classical ITP and a 180-fold accumulation was achieved through CAF IEF and preconcentration with a glyphosate sample. Both methods are simple and can be conducted using all commercial ITP systems.
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