Issue 4, 2012

A microfluidic device for the automated derivatization of free fatty acids to fatty acidmethylesters

Abstract

Free fatty acid (FFA) compositions are examined in feedstock for biodiesel production, as source-specific markers in soil, and because of their role in cellular signaling. However, sample preparation of FFAs for gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) analysis can be time and labor intensive. Therefore, to increase sample preparation throughput, a glass microfluidic device was developed to automate derivatization of FFAs to fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs). FFAs were delivered to one input of the device and methanolic-HCl was delivered to a second input. FAME products were produced as the reagents traversed a 29 μL reaction channel held at 55 °C. A Design of Experiment protocol was used to determine the combination of derivatization time (Tder) and ratio of methanolic-HCl:FFA (Rder) that maximized the derivatization efficiencies of tridecanoic acid and stearic acid to their methyl ester forms. The combination of Tder = 0.8 min and Rder = 4.9 that produced optimal derivatization conditions for both FFAs within a 5 min total sample preparation time was determined. This combination of Tder and Rder was used to derivatize 12 FFAs with a range of derivatization efficiencies from 18% to 93% with efficiencies of 61% for tridecanoic acid and 84% for stearic acid. As compared to a conventional macroscale derivatization of FFA to FAME, the microfluidic device decreased the volume of methanolic-HCl and FFA by 20- and 1300-fold, respectively. The developed microfluidic device can be used for automated preparation of FAMEs to analyze the FFA compositions of volume-limited samples.

Graphical abstract: A microfluidic device for the automated derivatization of free fatty acids to fatty acid methyl esters

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 Oct 2011
Accepted
05 Dec 2011
First published
14 Dec 2011

Analyst, 2012,137, 840-846

A microfluidic device for the automated derivatization of free fatty acids to fatty acid methyl esters

C. T. Duong and M. G. Roper, Analyst, 2012, 137, 840 DOI: 10.1039/C2AN15911B

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