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Control of EOF in CE by different ways of application of radial electric field
Author(s) -
Sázelová Petra,
Kašička Václav,
Koval Dušan,
Prusík Zdeněk,
Fanali Salvatore,
Aturki Zeineb
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
electrophoresis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1522-2683
pISSN - 0173-0835
DOI - 10.1002/elps.200600418
Subject(s) - electric field , electrokinetic phenomena , capillary action , coating , voltage , electrophoresis , materials science , capillary electrophoresis , capillary electrochromatography , perpendicular , chemistry , analytical chemistry (journal) , composite material , chromatography , nanotechnology , electrical engineering , physics , geometry , mathematics , engineering , quantum mechanics
Various ways of application of radial electric field for the control of electrokinetic potential and EOF in a home‐made device for CE are presented. The device comprises three high‐voltage power supplies, which are used to form a radial electric field across the fused‐silica capillary wall. One power supply provides the internal electric field – a driving force for electrophoretic migration of charged analytes and for the EOF. Two power supplies are connected to the ends of the outer low‐conductivity polymeric coating, which is formed by the dispersion of insoluble conductive copolymer of aniline and p‐ phenylendiamine in polystyrene matrix (dissolved in N ‐methylpyrrolidone) attached to the original outer polyimide coating of the capillary. They are able to constitute the external longitudinal electric field with variable values of electric potential at both ends of the outer coating. The potential gradient between the external and internal electric field is perpendicular to the capillary wall and forms a radial electric field across the capillary wall, which affects the electrokinetic potential at the solid–liquid interface and EOF inside the capillary. The developed device and methodology has been applied for the analysis of both chiral and achiral molecules such as terbutaline enantiomers and oligopeptides (diglycine and triglycine). The effect of magnitude, orientation, and different ways of application of the radial electric field on the flow rate of the EOF and on the speed, efficiency, and resolution of CZE separations of the above analytes in the internally noncoated fused‐silica capillaries have been evaluated.

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