Issue 16, 2013

Encapsulation of fluidic tubing and microelectrodes in microfluidic devices: integrating off-chip process and coupling conventional capillary electrophoresis with electrochemical detection

Abstract

In this paper, an approach to fabricate epoxy or polystyrene microdevices with encapsulated tubing and electrodes is described. Key features of this approach include a fixed alignment between the fluidic tubing and electrodes, the ability to polish the device when desired, and the low dead volume nature of the fluidic interconnects. It is shown that a variety of tubing can be encapsulated with this approach, including fused silica capillary, polyetheretherketone (PEEK), and perfluoroalkoxy (PFA), with the resulting tubing/microchip interface not leading to significant band broadening or plug dilution. The applicability of the devices with embedded tubing is demonstrated by integrating several off-chip analytical methods to the microchip. This includes droplet transfer, droplet desegmentation, and microchip-based flow injection analysis. Off-chip generated droplets can be transferred to the microchip with minimal coalescence, while flow injection studies showed improved peak shape and sensitivity when compared to the use of fluidic interconnects with an appreciable dead volume. Importantly, it is shown that this low dead volume approach can be extended to also enable the integration of conventional capillary electrophoresis (CE) with electrochemical detection. This is accomplished by embedding fused silica capillary along with palladium (for grounding the electrophoresis voltage) and platinum (for detection) electrodes. With this approach, up to 128 000 theoretical plates for dopamine was possible. In all cases, the tubing and electrodes are housed in a rigid base; this results in extremely robust devices that will be of interest to researchers wanting to develop microchips for use by non-experts.

Graphical abstract: Encapsulation of fluidic tubing and microelectrodes in microfluidic devices: integrating off-chip process and coupling conventional capillary electrophoresis with electrochemical detection

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 May 2013
Accepted
03 Jul 2013
First published
12 Jul 2013

Anal. Methods, 2013,5, 4220-4229

Encapsulation of fluidic tubing and microelectrodes in microfluidic devices: integrating off-chip process and coupling conventional capillary electrophoresis with electrochemical detection

V. Becirovic, S. R. Doonan and R. S. Martin, Anal. Methods, 2013, 5, 4220 DOI: 10.1039/C3AY40809D

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