The exploitation of enzymes for biotransformation reactions for the production of new and safer d... more The exploitation of enzymes for biotransformation reactions for the production of new and safer drug intermediates has been the focus of much research. While a number of enzymes are commercially available, their use in an industrial setting is often limited to reactions that are cost-effective and they are rarely investigated further. However, the development of miniaturized flow reactor technology has meant that the cost of such research, once considered cost- and time-inefficient, would be much less prohibitive. The use of miniaturized flow reactors for enzyme screening offers a number of advantages over batch enzyme assay systems. Since the assay is performed on a miniaturized scale, enzyme, substrate and cofactor quantities are significantly reduced, thus reducing the cost of laboratory-scale investigations. Since flow reactors use microfluidic systems, where the substrate and products flow out of the system, the problems of substrate inhibition and product inhibition encountered by some enzymes are avoided. Quite often, enzymes fulfil a single-use function in biotransformation processes; however, enzyme immobilization allows enzyme reuse and often helps to increase enzyme stability. We have used an aminoacylase enzyme with potential use for industrial biotransformation reactions and have successfully immobilized it in miniaturized flow reactors. This L-aminoacylase is from the thermophilic archaeon Thermococcus litoralis. Two approaches to enzyme immobilization have been examined, both involving enzyme cross-linking. The first reactor type has used monoliths, to which the enzyme was attached, and the second contained previously cross-linked enzyme trapped using frits, in the microfluidic channels. Two different microreactor designs were used in the investigation: microreactor chips for the monoliths and capillary flow reactors for the cross-linked enzyme. These systems allowed passage of the substrate and product through the system while retaining the aminoacylase enzyme performing the catalytic conversion. The enzyme has been successfully immobilized and used to produce stable biocatalytic microreactors that can be used repeatedly over a period of several months.
Page 1. Determination of morpholine fungicides using the tris(2,2A-bipyridine) ruthenium(II) chem... more Page 1. Determination of morpholine fungicides using the tris(2,2A-bipyridine) ruthenium(II) chemiluminescence reaction Jesus M. Gonzalez, Gillian M. Greenway,* Tom McCreedy and Song Qijun Department of Chemistry, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX. ...
An electrogenerated chemiluminescence (ECL) method for the determination of pethidine, atropine, ... more An electrogenerated chemiluminescence (ECL) method for the determination of pethidine, atropine, homatropine and cocaine is described. The optimum conditions were found to be similar for all of these compounds although the ECL emission intensity for cocaine was an order of magnitude lower than for pethidine due to their different chemical structures. Linear calibrations were obtained for all the compounds at pH 10 in borate buffer (0.05 mol l-1) at 1.3 V. Limits of detection of 6.8 x 10(-8), 2.2 x 10(-7), 3.2 x 10(-7) and 6.5 x 10(-7) mol l-1, respectively, were achieved for pethidine, atropine, homatropine and cocaine in standard solutions. Solid-phase extraction was used to separate the drugs from their matrix and the method was applied to the determination of spiked urine samples. The limits of quantitation for pethidine, atropine, homatropine and cocaine in urine were 1.0 x 10(-6), 2.0 x 10(-6), 2.0 x 10(-6) and 4.0 x 10(-6) mol l-1, respectively, with recoveries of between 90 and 110%.
Gold (0–75 μg ml−1) was determined spectrophotometrically at 605 nm in a flow injection (FI) syst... more Gold (0–75 μg ml−1) was determined spectrophotometrically at 605 nm in a flow injection (FI) system based on the reaction of gold(III) and 5-(4-sulphophenylazo)-8-aminoquinoline (SPA) in the presence of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB). The carrier stream was 1% (w/v) disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetate and the reagent streams were 2.0 × 10−4 M SPA and 0.6% (w/v) sodium hydroxide solution. The sample solution was mixed with 0.2% (w/v) CTAB solution prior to injection. The various chemical and physical variables were optimised and a study of interfering ions was carried out. The relative standard deviation for the determination of 5 μg ml−1 gold was 0.9% (n = 10) and the limit of detection (blank signal plus three times the standard deviation of the blank) was 1.1 μg ml−1, both based on injection volumes of 60 μl. The method has been successfully applied to the determination of gold in ores and anode slimes.
... coupled plasma mass spectrometry for rapid elemental speciation Qi Jun Song,{ Gillian M. Gree... more ... coupled plasma mass spectrometry for rapid elemental speciation Qi Jun Song,{ Gillian M. Greenway* and Tom McCreedy ... The chip had an 8 cm long, 100 mm wide and 20 mm deep separation channel etched in a serpentine pattern on the glass base plate (30 6 25 6 3 mm). ...
The paper reports on a preliminary study into the coupling of a microreactor to a GC-FID, using a... more The paper reports on a preliminary study into the coupling of a microreactor to a GC-FID, using a standard GC needle as the interface between the microreactor and the injection port of a conventional GC. Using the injection needle as the ground electrode, electroosmotic flow was used to control the injection of reagent/sample into the GC. Photolithographic and wet etching techniques were used to fabricate the microreactor (channels 200 microns id, 100 microns deep) in a borosilicate glass substrate. The results of the effects of voltage and injection times on the response signal are presented. The critical obstacles to overcome were the backpressure posed by the carrier gas disrupting the liquid flow in the channels and reservoirs of the microreactor and the need to thermally insulate the microreactor, to prevent evaporation of solvent and reagents from the device.
This paper describes the electric field-induced flow characteristics of multiphase solutions in a... more This paper describes the electric field-induced flow characteristics of multiphase solutions in a micro reactor device using the nitration of benzene as a model process. Photolithographic and wet etching techniques were used to fabricate the micro reactor (channels, 200 microns id, 100 microns deep) in a borosilicate glass substrate. The results focus specifically on the flow parameters of reagents/reactants (i.e., voltage, solution concentration and pH ranges and current-voltage relationships) used in this study. The benzene was introduced and mobilised by electroosmotic flow (EOF), as a microemulsion using an appropriate surfactant (sodium dodecyl sulfate), whilst the nitronium ions, produced in situ from mixed H2SO4-HNO3 (the nitrating agent), underwent electrophoretic-induced (electrokinetic) mobility. A co-surfactant, butan-1-ol, was used owing to (a) its relative solubility in the aqueous surfactant solution, (b) its ability to aid the solubilization of benzene, (c) the provision of a water-rich (oil-in-water) rather than oil-rich (water-in-oil) microemulsion system and (d) its lack of significant adverse effects on the EOF. The optimum conditions used for the nitration of benzene within the micro reactor were a run of the microemulsion as main reagent stream, then three 30 s segmented injections of mixed acid, with a 5 s push of the microemulsion into the system after each injection, and then a 60 s stopped-flow reaction time before driving reaction product segments to a collection reservoir.
Through the preparation of a novel controlled pore glass-poly(pyrrole) material we have developed... more Through the preparation of a novel controlled pore glass-poly(pyrrole) material we have developed a conducting support that is not only suitable for the co-immobilisation of enzymes and co-factors, but also enables the facile electrochemical regeneration of the co-factor during a reaction. Employing the selective reduction of (rac)-2-phenylpropionaldehyde to (S)-phenyl-1-propanol as a model, we have demonstrated the successful co-immobilisation of the HLADH enzyme and co-factor NAD(H); with incorporation of the material into a continuous flow reactor facilitating the in situ electrochemical regeneration of NAD(H) for in excess of 100 h. Using this approach we have developed a reagent-less, atom efficient system applicable to the cost-effective, continuous biosynthesis of chiral compounds.
We have developed a method for the quantitative 3-dimensional profiling of micron sized channel n... more We have developed a method for the quantitative 3-dimensional profiling of micron sized channel networks within optically transparent "lab-on-a-chip" microreactor devices. The method involves capturing digitised microscope images of the channel network filled with an optically absorbing dye. The microscope is operated in transmission mode using light filtered through a narrow bandpass filter with a maximum transmission wavelength matching the wavelength of the absorbance maximum of the dye solution. Digitised images of a chip filled with solvent and dye solution are analysed pixel by pixel to yield a spatially resolved array of absorbance values. This array is then converted to optical path length values using the Beer-Lambert law, thereby providing the 3D profile of the channel network. The method is capable of measuring channel depths from 10 to 500 microm (and probably even smaller depths) with an accuracy of a few percent. Lateral spatial resolution of less than 1 microm is achievable. It has been established that distortion of the measured profiles resulting from a mismatch in refractive index between the dye solution and the glass of the microreactors is insignificant. The method has been successfully used here to investigate the effects of thermal bonding and etch time on channel profiles. The technique provides a convenient, accurate and non-destructive method required to determine channel profiles; information which is essential to enable optimisation of the operating characteristics of microreactor devices for particular applications.
The exploitation of enzymes for biotransformation reactions for the production of new and safer d... more The exploitation of enzymes for biotransformation reactions for the production of new and safer drug intermediates has been the focus of much research. While a number of enzymes are commercially available, their use in an industrial setting is often limited to reactions that are cost-effective and they are rarely investigated further. However, the development of miniaturized flow reactor technology has meant that the cost of such research, once considered cost- and time-inefficient, would be much less prohibitive. The use of miniaturized flow reactors for enzyme screening offers a number of advantages over batch enzyme assay systems. Since the assay is performed on a miniaturized scale, enzyme, substrate and cofactor quantities are significantly reduced, thus reducing the cost of laboratory-scale investigations. Since flow reactors use microfluidic systems, where the substrate and products flow out of the system, the problems of substrate inhibition and product inhibition encountered by some enzymes are avoided. Quite often, enzymes fulfil a single-use function in biotransformation processes; however, enzyme immobilization allows enzyme reuse and often helps to increase enzyme stability. We have used an aminoacylase enzyme with potential use for industrial biotransformation reactions and have successfully immobilized it in miniaturized flow reactors. This L-aminoacylase is from the thermophilic archaeon Thermococcus litoralis. Two approaches to enzyme immobilization have been examined, both involving enzyme cross-linking. The first reactor type has used monoliths, to which the enzyme was attached, and the second contained previously cross-linked enzyme trapped using frits, in the microfluidic channels. Two different microreactor designs were used in the investigation: microreactor chips for the monoliths and capillary flow reactors for the cross-linked enzyme. These systems allowed passage of the substrate and product through the system while retaining the aminoacylase enzyme performing the catalytic conversion. The enzyme has been successfully immobilized and used to produce stable biocatalytic microreactors that can be used repeatedly over a period of several months.
Page 1. Determination of morpholine fungicides using the tris(2,2A-bipyridine) ruthenium(II) chem... more Page 1. Determination of morpholine fungicides using the tris(2,2A-bipyridine) ruthenium(II) chemiluminescence reaction Jesus M. Gonzalez, Gillian M. Greenway,* Tom McCreedy and Song Qijun Department of Chemistry, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX. ...
An electrogenerated chemiluminescence (ECL) method for the determination of pethidine, atropine, ... more An electrogenerated chemiluminescence (ECL) method for the determination of pethidine, atropine, homatropine and cocaine is described. The optimum conditions were found to be similar for all of these compounds although the ECL emission intensity for cocaine was an order of magnitude lower than for pethidine due to their different chemical structures. Linear calibrations were obtained for all the compounds at pH 10 in borate buffer (0.05 mol l-1) at 1.3 V. Limits of detection of 6.8 x 10(-8), 2.2 x 10(-7), 3.2 x 10(-7) and 6.5 x 10(-7) mol l-1, respectively, were achieved for pethidine, atropine, homatropine and cocaine in standard solutions. Solid-phase extraction was used to separate the drugs from their matrix and the method was applied to the determination of spiked urine samples. The limits of quantitation for pethidine, atropine, homatropine and cocaine in urine were 1.0 x 10(-6), 2.0 x 10(-6), 2.0 x 10(-6) and 4.0 x 10(-6) mol l-1, respectively, with recoveries of between 90 and 110%.
Gold (0–75 μg ml−1) was determined spectrophotometrically at 605 nm in a flow injection (FI) syst... more Gold (0–75 μg ml−1) was determined spectrophotometrically at 605 nm in a flow injection (FI) system based on the reaction of gold(III) and 5-(4-sulphophenylazo)-8-aminoquinoline (SPA) in the presence of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB). The carrier stream was 1% (w/v) disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetate and the reagent streams were 2.0 × 10−4 M SPA and 0.6% (w/v) sodium hydroxide solution. The sample solution was mixed with 0.2% (w/v) CTAB solution prior to injection. The various chemical and physical variables were optimised and a study of interfering ions was carried out. The relative standard deviation for the determination of 5 μg ml−1 gold was 0.9% (n = 10) and the limit of detection (blank signal plus three times the standard deviation of the blank) was 1.1 μg ml−1, both based on injection volumes of 60 μl. The method has been successfully applied to the determination of gold in ores and anode slimes.
... coupled plasma mass spectrometry for rapid elemental speciation Qi Jun Song,{ Gillian M. Gree... more ... coupled plasma mass spectrometry for rapid elemental speciation Qi Jun Song,{ Gillian M. Greenway* and Tom McCreedy ... The chip had an 8 cm long, 100 mm wide and 20 mm deep separation channel etched in a serpentine pattern on the glass base plate (30 6 25 6 3 mm). ...
The paper reports on a preliminary study into the coupling of a microreactor to a GC-FID, using a... more The paper reports on a preliminary study into the coupling of a microreactor to a GC-FID, using a standard GC needle as the interface between the microreactor and the injection port of a conventional GC. Using the injection needle as the ground electrode, electroosmotic flow was used to control the injection of reagent/sample into the GC. Photolithographic and wet etching techniques were used to fabricate the microreactor (channels 200 microns id, 100 microns deep) in a borosilicate glass substrate. The results of the effects of voltage and injection times on the response signal are presented. The critical obstacles to overcome were the backpressure posed by the carrier gas disrupting the liquid flow in the channels and reservoirs of the microreactor and the need to thermally insulate the microreactor, to prevent evaporation of solvent and reagents from the device.
This paper describes the electric field-induced flow characteristics of multiphase solutions in a... more This paper describes the electric field-induced flow characteristics of multiphase solutions in a micro reactor device using the nitration of benzene as a model process. Photolithographic and wet etching techniques were used to fabricate the micro reactor (channels, 200 microns id, 100 microns deep) in a borosilicate glass substrate. The results focus specifically on the flow parameters of reagents/reactants (i.e., voltage, solution concentration and pH ranges and current-voltage relationships) used in this study. The benzene was introduced and mobilised by electroosmotic flow (EOF), as a microemulsion using an appropriate surfactant (sodium dodecyl sulfate), whilst the nitronium ions, produced in situ from mixed H2SO4-HNO3 (the nitrating agent), underwent electrophoretic-induced (electrokinetic) mobility. A co-surfactant, butan-1-ol, was used owing to (a) its relative solubility in the aqueous surfactant solution, (b) its ability to aid the solubilization of benzene, (c) the provision of a water-rich (oil-in-water) rather than oil-rich (water-in-oil) microemulsion system and (d) its lack of significant adverse effects on the EOF. The optimum conditions used for the nitration of benzene within the micro reactor were a run of the microemulsion as main reagent stream, then three 30 s segmented injections of mixed acid, with a 5 s push of the microemulsion into the system after each injection, and then a 60 s stopped-flow reaction time before driving reaction product segments to a collection reservoir.
Through the preparation of a novel controlled pore glass-poly(pyrrole) material we have developed... more Through the preparation of a novel controlled pore glass-poly(pyrrole) material we have developed a conducting support that is not only suitable for the co-immobilisation of enzymes and co-factors, but also enables the facile electrochemical regeneration of the co-factor during a reaction. Employing the selective reduction of (rac)-2-phenylpropionaldehyde to (S)-phenyl-1-propanol as a model, we have demonstrated the successful co-immobilisation of the HLADH enzyme and co-factor NAD(H); with incorporation of the material into a continuous flow reactor facilitating the in situ electrochemical regeneration of NAD(H) for in excess of 100 h. Using this approach we have developed a reagent-less, atom efficient system applicable to the cost-effective, continuous biosynthesis of chiral compounds.
We have developed a method for the quantitative 3-dimensional profiling of micron sized channel n... more We have developed a method for the quantitative 3-dimensional profiling of micron sized channel networks within optically transparent "lab-on-a-chip" microreactor devices. The method involves capturing digitised microscope images of the channel network filled with an optically absorbing dye. The microscope is operated in transmission mode using light filtered through a narrow bandpass filter with a maximum transmission wavelength matching the wavelength of the absorbance maximum of the dye solution. Digitised images of a chip filled with solvent and dye solution are analysed pixel by pixel to yield a spatially resolved array of absorbance values. This array is then converted to optical path length values using the Beer-Lambert law, thereby providing the 3D profile of the channel network. The method is capable of measuring channel depths from 10 to 500 microm (and probably even smaller depths) with an accuracy of a few percent. Lateral spatial resolution of less than 1 microm is achievable. It has been established that distortion of the measured profiles resulting from a mismatch in refractive index between the dye solution and the glass of the microreactors is insignificant. The method has been successfully used here to investigate the effects of thermal bonding and etch time on channel profiles. The technique provides a convenient, accurate and non-destructive method required to determine channel profiles; information which is essential to enable optimisation of the operating characteristics of microreactor devices for particular applications.
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