Abstract

Separation of polydisperse, single-charged analytes in the nanometer size range in a high laminar sheath flow of particle-free ambient air and a tunable electric field based on the respective particle electrophoretic mobility diameter (EMD) can be achieved via gas-phase electrophoresis. In order to transfer analytes from a volatile electrolyte solution to the gas-phase as a single-charged species, a nano electrospray (nES) process followed by drying of nanodroplets and charge conditioning reaching Boltzmann charge equilibrium is a necessary prerequisite. In the case of a so-called nES gas-phase electrophoretic mobility molecular analyzer (nES GEMMA, also known as nES differential mobility analyzer, nES DMA), charge equilibration is based on bionanoparticle interaction with a bipolar atmosphere induced, e.g., by a radioactive α-particle emitter like 210Po. It was the aim of our investigation to examine whether such a radioactive source can be easily replaced in the same nES housing by a nonradioactive one, i.e., by an AC corona discharge unit. The latter would be significantly easier to handle when compared to radioactive material in laboratory day-to-day business, waste disposal, as well as regulatory confinements. Indeed, we were able to combine a standard nES unit of our nES GEMMA instrument with a commercially available AC corona discharge device in a novel setup via an adapter. Our results show that this replacement yields very good results for a number of chemically different nanoparticles, an exemplary protein, a noncovalent protein complex, a virus-like particle, a polymer, and a liposome sample, when compared to a 210Po based bipolar charge equilibration device.

Highlights

  • Separation of polydisperse, single-charged analytes in the nanometer size range in a high laminar sheath flow of particle-free ambient air and a tunable electric field based on the respective particle electrophoretic mobility diameter (EMD) can be achieved via gas-phase electrophoresis

  • Gas-phase electrophoresis describes a technique separating single-charged analytes in the range from single-digit to several hundred nanometer size in the gas-phase at ambient pressure according to their electrophoretic mobility diameter (EMD)

  • Gas-phase electrophoresis is based on the separation of polydisperse, surface-dry, and single-charged NP material in a high laminar sheath flow of particle-free air and an orthogonal tunable electric field

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Separation of polydisperse, single-charged analytes in the nanometer size range in a high laminar sheath flow of particle-free ambient air and a tunable electric field based on the respective particle electrophoretic mobility diameter (EMD) can be achieved via gas-phase electrophoresis. Gas-phase electrophoresis is based on the separation of polydisperse, surface-dry, and single-charged NP material in a high laminar sheath flow of particle-free air and an orthogonal tunable electric field.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call