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Indirect photometric detection of anions in nonaqueous capillary electrophoresis employing Orange G as probe and a light-emitting diode-based detector
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posted on 2023-05-16, 23:03 authored by Blanco Heras, GA, Michael BreadmoreMichael Breadmore, Johns, CA, Hutchinson, JP, Emily HilderEmily Hilder, Lopez-Mahia, P, Paul HaddadPaul HaddadA method based on indirect photometric detection (IPD) in CE employing a blue LED (473 nm) as a light source and the highly absorbing (478 nm) anionic dye, Orange G, as the probe ion was developed for the sensitive analysis of inorganic and organic anions. The use of nonaqueous solvents was examined as a simple way to reduce the adsorption of the dye onto the capillary wall and to thereby improve the baseline stability. The benefits of this approach were confirmed by experiments using BGEs in methanol (MeOH) and DMSO in which superior baselines were obtained relative to those achieved using aqueous electrolyte systems. A range of commercial LEDs was tested to improve the detection performance, with a difference of 25% in sensitivity being observed between the best and worst performing LED. The final system (4 mM Orange G, 0.05% w/v hydroxypropylcellulose (HPC), 20 mM triethanolamine (TEA) in pure MeOH) exhibited stable baselines and very low LODs (0.10-0.18 μM) for a test mixture comprising nine inorganic and organic anions. These values represent a two- to six-fold improvement over previous studies and the proposed method provides the most sensitive IPD method for the determination of anions using CE published to date. RSDs for ten replicates were in the ranges of 0.42-0.62% for migration time, 1.41-3.46% for peak area and 3.20-5.78% for peak height. © 2008 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
History
Publication title
ElectrophoresisVolume
29Issue
14Pagination
3032-3037ISSN
0173-0835Department/School
School of Natural SciencesPublisher
Wiley VCHPlace of publication
WeinheimRepository Status
- Restricted
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