Issue 7, 2006

Capillary liquid chromatography–microchip atmospheric pressure chemical ionization–mass spectrometry

Abstract

A miniaturized nebulizer chip for capillary liquid chromatographyatmospheric pressure chemical ionizationmass spectrometry (capillary LC–microchip APCI-MS) is presented. The APCI chip consists of two wafers, a silicon wafer and a Pyrex glass wafer. The silicon wafer has a DRIE etched through-wafer nebulizer gas inlet, an edge capillary insertion channel, a stopper, a vaporizer channel and a nozzle. The platinum heater electrode and pads for electrical connection were patterned on to the Pyrex glass wafer. The two wafers were joined by anodic bonding, creating a microchip version of an APCI-source. The sample inlet capillary from an LC column is directly connected to the vaporizer channel of the APCI chip. The etched nozzle in the microchip forms a narrow sample plume, which is ionized by an external corona needle, and the formed ions are analyzed by a mass spectrometer. The nebulizer chip enables for the first time the use of low flow rate separation techniques with APCI-MS. The performance of capillary LC–microchip APCI-MS was tested with selected neurosteroids. The capillary LC–microchip APCI-MS provides quantitative repeatability and good linearity. The limits of detection (LOD) with a signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of 3 in MS/MS mode for the selected neurosteroids were 20–1000 fmol (10–500 nmol l−1). LODs (S/N = 3) with commercial macro APCI with the same compounds using the same MS were about 10 times higher. Fast heat transfer allows the use of the optimized temperature for each compound during an LC run. The microchip APCI-source provides a convenient and easy method to combine capillary LC to any API-MS equipped with an APCI source. The advantages and potentials of the microchip APCI also make it a very attractive interface in microfluidic APCI-MS.

Graphical abstract: Capillary liquid chromatography–microchip atmospheric pressure chemical ionization–mass spectrometry

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
26 Jan 2006
Accepted
06 Apr 2006
First published
27 Apr 2006

Lab Chip, 2006,6, 948-953

Capillary liquid chromatography–microchip atmospheric pressure chemical ionizationmass spectrometry

P. Östman, S. Jäntti, K. Grigoras, V. Saarela, R. A. Ketola, S. Franssila, T. Kotiaho and R. Kostiainen, Lab Chip, 2006, 6, 948 DOI: 10.1039/B601290F

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