4.8 Article

Enantioseparation and Amperometric Detection of Chiral Compounds by in Situ Molecular Imprinting on the Microchannel Wall

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 81, Issue 23, Pages 9651-9656

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac902201a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of ST [2007BAK261306, 2006BAK09B05, 2010CB732400]
  2. NSFC [20821063, 20535010, 90713015, 20875044, 20705012]

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The molecular imprinting technique wits first introduced into the microchannel of a microfluidic device to form in situ the imprinted polymer for fast enantioseparation of chiral compounds. The molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) was in situ chemically polymerized on the microchannel wall using acrylamide as the functional monomer kind ethylene glycol dimethacrylate as the cross-linker, and characterized by scanning electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, and infrared spectroscopy. Under the optimized conditions, such as optimal preparation of MIP, composition and pH of mobile phase, and separation voltage, the model enantiomers, tert-butoxycarbonyl-D-tryptophan (BOC-D-Trp) and Boc-L-Trp, could be baseline separated within 75 s. The linear ranges for amperometric detection of the enantiomers using carbon fiber microdisk electrode at +1.2 V (vs Ag/AgCl) were from 75 to 4000 mu M and 400 to 4000 mu M with the detection limits of 20 and 140 mu M, respectively. The MIP-microchip electrophoresis provided a powerful protocol for separation and detection of Boc-Trp enantiomers within a short analytical time. The molecular imprinting on microchannel wall opens a promising avenue for fast enantioscreening of chiral compounds.

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