| Literature DB >> 25343806 |
Dingjie Wang1, Uwe Weierstall1, Lois Pollack2, John Spence1.
Abstract
Several liquid sample injection methods have been developed to satisfy the requirements for serial femtosecond X-ray nanocrystallography, which enables radiation-damage-free determination of molecular structure at room temperature. Time-resolved nanocrystallography would combine structure analysis with chemical kinetics by determining the structures of the transient states and chemical kinetic mechanisms simultaneously. A windowless liquid mixing jet device has been designed for this purpose. It achieves fast uniform mixing of substrates and enzymes in the jet within 250 µs, with an adjustable delay between mixing and probing by the X-ray free-electron laser beam of up to 1 s for each frame of a `movie'. The principle of the liquid mixing jet device is illustrated using numerical simulation, and experimental results are presented using a fluorescent dye.Entities:
Keywords: chemical kinetics; mixing jet; sample injection; time-resolved diffraction
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25343806 PMCID: PMC4211133 DOI: 10.1107/S160057751401858X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1(a) Geometry and principle of the liquid mixing jet device. Two liquids, fed through the inner liquid line and the outer liquid line, mix at the end of the inner liquid line. After an adjustable delay, flowing between the end of the inner line and the end of the outer line, the flow goes through a gas focusing process and forms a thin jet. The delay time can be changed by changing the position of the inner liquid line relative to the outer liquid line. (b) Photograph of the actual device, showing the innermost capillary on-axis and the emerging jet.
Figure 2This fluorescence experiment illustrates the mixing process. The field of view shows only the innermost capillary tube at the ‘Mixing Region’ indicated in Fig. 1 ▶. (a) Fluorescent dye in the inner line, water in the outer line. (b) Fluorescent dye in the inner line, quencher in the outer line. Quenching represents the mixing process. A blue background is seen along the lower edge of each image.
Figure 3Numerical simulations illustrate the diffusion into the inner flow during the mixing process. The color scale shows concentration from 0 to 1 mol m−3. Contours represent concentrations of 0.7 mol m−3, the mixing criteria. Streamlines show the inner flow.