Literature DB >> 29745386

Optical calorimetry in microfluidic droplets.

Jacob Chamoun1, Ashish Pattekar, Farzaneh Afshinmanesh, Joerg Martini, Michael I Recht.   

Abstract

A novel microfluidic calorimeter that measures the enthalpy change of reactions occurring in 100 μm diameter aqueous droplets in fluoropolymer oil has been developed. The aqueous reactants flow into a microfluidic droplet generation chip in separate fluidic channels, limiting contact between the streams until immediately before they form the droplet. The diffusion-driven mixing of reactants is predominantly restricted to within the droplet. The temperature change in droplets due to the heat of reaction is measured optically by recording the reflectance spectra of encapsulated thermochromic liquid crystals (TLC) that are added to one of the reactant streams. As the droplets travel through the channel, the spectral characteristics of the TLC represent the internal temperature, allowing optical measurement with a precision of ≈6 mK. The microfluidic chip and all fluids are temperature controlled, and the reaction heat within droplets raises their temperature until thermal diffusion dissipates the heat into the surrounding oil and chip walls. Position resolved optical temperature measurement of the droplets allows calculation of the heat of reaction by analyzing the droplet temperature profile over time. Channel dimensions, droplet generation rate, droplet size, reactant stream flows and oil flow rate are carefully balanced to provide rapid diffusional mixing of reactants compared to thermal diffusion, while avoiding thermal "quenching" due to contact between the droplets and the chip walls. Compared to conventional microcalorimetry, which has been used in this work to provide reference measurements, this new continuous flow droplet calorimeter has the potential to perform titrations ≈1000-fold faster while using ≈400-fold less reactants per titration.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29745386      PMCID: PMC5999407          DOI: 10.1039/c7lc01266g

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lab Chip        ISSN: 1473-0189            Impact factor:   6.799


  27 in total

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5.  Nanometre-scale thermometry in a living cell.

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  1 in total

1.  micrIO: an open-source autosampler and fraction collector for automated microfluidic input-output.

Authors:  Scott A Longwell; Polly M Fordyce
Journal:  Lab Chip       Date:  2019-11-08       Impact factor: 6.799

  1 in total

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