4.7 Article

An electro-osmotic micro-pump based on monolithic silica for micro-flow analyses and electro-sprays

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 382, Issue 3, Pages 817-824

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-005-3130-7

Keywords

electroosmotic micropump; monolith; sol-gel; bio-sensor; flow-injection analysis; electrospray

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A high-pressure electro-osmotic micro-pump fabricated by a sol-gel process is reported as a fluid-driving unit in a flow-injection analysis (FIA) system. The micro FIA system consists of a monolithic micro-pump on a glass slide (2.5 x 7.5 cm), a micro-injector, and a microsensor ( 2.5 x 1.5 cm). The monolithic silica matrix has a continuous skeleton morphology with micrometer-sized through-pores. The micrometer-size pores with a large negative surface charge density build up a large pressure under a DC electric field to drive fluid through the downstream units. A novel Nafion joint for the downstream cathode eliminates flow into the electrode reservoir and further enhances pressure build-up. The measured pump-pressure curve indicated a maximum pressure of 0.4 MPa at. ow rate of 0.4 mu L min(-1) at 6 kV. Despite the large voltage, the small current transmission area through the monolith produced a negligible current ( less than 100 mu A) that did not generate bubbles or ion contaminants. The. ow rate can be precisely controlled in the range 200 nL to 2.5 mu L min(-1) by varying the voltage from 1 to 6 kV. The high pump pressure and the large current-free DC field also enabled the pump to act as an electro- spray interface with a downstream analytical instrument.

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