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Miniaturization and Mass Spectrometry

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: London Royal Society of Chemistry 2008Description: 315pISBN:
  • 9780854041299
DDC classification:
  • 543.0873 MIN
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Holdings
Item type Current library Item location Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Reference Book Reference Book NIMA Knowledge Centre 7th Floor Silence Zone Reference 543.0873 MIN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan P0006777
Total holds: 0

The recent explosion in the use of analytical chemistry, particularly in the biological sciences, has led to a need for fast, reliable and highly sensitive tools able to handle small sample sizes. This book illustrates how microfluidics and lab-on-a-chip devices can satisfy the growing need for miniaturized and enhanced analysis. They lend themselves well to mass spectrometric detection as they use samples in the low microlitre range and are handled on a chip. Miniaturization and Mass Spectrometry focuses on one particular technique, mass spectrometry, whose popularity has increased dramatically in the last two decades with the increase in use of biological analysis and the development of two "soft" ionization techniques, ESI and MALDI. These enable the analysis of large but fragile biological molecules such as DNA, proteins and oligosaccharides. The book starts with an introduction to the coupling of microfluidics to mass spectrometry techniques. It then goes on demonstrate the advantages of such a coupling: the MS analysis benefits from improved sample preparation when performed on a chip while MS yields more information on the sample handled on the chip compared to conventional optical detection. A history on the developments in this field, starting from the off-chip coupling to the on-chip ionization, is also provided. Daniel Figeys, a pioneer in the development of microfluidic systems for MS analysis, describes the early beginnings of this hyphenated analysis technique. Solutions to couple microfluidic systems to the two most popular ionization methods, ESI and MALDI, are presented throughout the chapters. Various examples are given of the application of this microfluidics-MS hyphenated analysis technique to proteomics, metabolomics, organic chemistry and forensics. Coverage is not limited to academic research. The development of commercialized systems and their current use for routine biological analysis are also presented. Lastly, a future vision of the integration of the mass spectrometer on the chip is raised, as a last step to yield fully portable systems for on-site analysis. capillary slot, electrospray ionization, sample subfractions, nib structure, peptide clusters, ion suppression phenomena, digital microfluidic system, resin casting method, photomask image, electrospray performance, nib tips, rotating ball inlet, microfabricated fluidic devices, biomarker components, dedicated holder, electrospray device, reaction microchannel, spray stability, chip outlet, emitter tips, electrospray tips, digital microfluidics, trimming method, ionization voltage, monitoring window

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