4.7 Article

Battery-operated, argon-hydrogen microplasma on hybrid, postage stamp-sized plastic-quartz chips for elemental analysis of liquid microsamples using a portable optical emission spectrometer

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 401, Issue 9, Pages 2865-2880

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-011-5372-x

Keywords

Microplasma on chip; Battery operation; Portable spectrometer; On-site analysis; Rapid prototyping; Optical sensor

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada

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A battery-operated, atmospheric pressure, self-igniting, planar geometry Ar-H-2 microplasma for elemental analysis of liquid microsamples is described. The inexpensive microplasma device (MPD) fabricated for this work was a hybrid plastic-quartz structure that was formed on chips with an area (roughly) equal to that of a small-sized postage stamp (MPD footprint, 12.5-mm width by 38-mm length). Plastic substrates were chosen due to their low cost, for rapid prototyping purposes, and for a speedy microplasma device evaluation. To enhance portability, the microplasma was operated from an 18-V rechargeable battery. To facilitate portability even further, it was demonstrated that the battery can be recharged by a portable solar panel. The battery-supplied dc voltage was converted to a high-voltage ac. The similar to 750-mu m (diameter) and 12-mm (long) Ar-H-2 (3% H-2) microplasma was formed by applying the high-voltage ac between two needle electrodes. Spectral interference from the electrode materials or from the plastic substrate was not observed. Operating conditions were found to be key to igniting and sustaining a microplasma that was simply warm to the touch (thus alleviating the need for cooling or other thermal management) and that had a stable background emission. A small-sized (900 mu L internal volume) electrothermal vaporization system (40-W max power) was used for microsample introduction. Microplasma background emission in the spectral region between 200 and 850 nm obtained using a portable fiber-optic spectrometer is reported and the effect of the operating conditions is described. Analyte emission from microliter volumes of dilute single-element standard solutions of Cd, Cu, K, Li, Mg, Mn, Na, Pb, and Zn is documented. The majority of spectral lines observed for the elements tested were from neutral atoms. The relative lack of emission from ion lines simplified the spectra, thus facilitating the use of a portable spectrometer. Despite the relative spectral simplicity, some spectral interference effects were noted when running a multi-element solution. An example of how interference in the spectral domain can be resolved in the time domain using selective thermal vaporization is provided. Analytical utility and performance characteristics are reported; for example, K concentrations in diluted (similar to 30 times) bottled water were determined to be 4.1 +/- 1.0 mu g/mL (4 mu g/mL was the stated concentration), precision was about 25%, and the estimated detection limits were in the picogram range (or in nanograms per milliliter in relative units).

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