Publication | Closed Access
Instrument and Method to Determine the Electrophoretic Mobility of Nanoparticles and Proteins by Combining Electrical and Flow Field-Flow Fractionation
34
Citations
14
References
2015
Year
NanoparticlesElectrohydrodynamicsEngineeringAnalytical MicrosystemsBiomedical EngineeringAnalytical UltracentrifugationElectrolysis ReactionsAnalytical InstrumentationBiosensing SystemsBioanalysisFlow Field-flow FractionationAnalytical ChemistryElectric FieldMicrofluidicsBiophysicsCapillary ElectrophoresisElectrophoretic MobilityNanofluidicsBiomedical AnalysisNew Fff MethodBiomolecular ScienceBiomedical DiagnosticsBioelectronicsField-flow FractionationLab-on-a-chipMedicineElectrical Mobility
A new FFF method is presented which combines asymmetrical flow-FFF (AF4) and electrical FFF (ElFFF) in one channel to electrical asymmetrical flow-FFF (EAF4) to overcome the restrictions of pure ElFFF. It allows for measuring electrophoretic mobility (μ) as a function of size. The method provides an absolute value and does not require calibration. Results of μ for two particle standards are in good agreement with values determined by phase analysis light scattering (PALS). There is no requirement for low ionic strength carriers with EAF4. This overcomes one of the main limitations of ElFFF, making it feasible to measure proteins under physiological conditions. EAF4 has the capability to determine μ for individual populations which are resolved into separate peaks. This is demonstrated for a mixture of three polystyrene latex particles with different sizes as well as for the monomer and dimer of BSA and an antibody. The experimental setup consists of an AF4 channel with added electrodes; one is placed beneath the frit at the bottom wall and the other covers the inside of the upper channel plate. This design minimizes contamination from the electrolysis reactions by keeping the particles distant from the electrodes. In addition the applied voltage range is low (1.5-5 V), which reduces the quantity of gaseous electrolysis products below a threshold that interferes with the laminar flow profile or detector signals. Besides measuring μ, the method can be useful to improve the separation between sample components compared to pure flow-FFF. For two proteins (BSA and a monoclonal antibody), enhanced resolution of the monomer and dimer is achieved by applying an electric field.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1