2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(618f) Electrokinetic Transport of Charged Analytes through Nanofluidic Channels
Author
In this work, we present a mathematical description of this transport process based on the Gouy-Chapman picture for the Debye layer around the channel walls. The electric potential induced by the charges at the channel surface has been determined here by solving the non-linear Poisson equation. The diffusion-convection equation has been then simplified using the Method of Moments technique to derive expressions for the average velocity and the Taylor-Aris dispersivity of the analyte bands as they travel through a nanofabricated duct. Our study shows that the effect of the lateral electric field on the solutal motion is critically determined by the ratio of an analyte's electrophoretic to diffusive transport rate across the lateral dimension of the nanochannel. The model further predicts that these effects can be exploited to enhance electrophoretic separations over that realized in a micrometer-sized conduit by tuning the extent of the Debye layer overlap in the system. This occurs as the axial transport rates in these devices exhibits an exponential dependence on the electrophoretic mobility of the analyte molecule rather than a linear dependence as observed in the limit of thin Debye layers. Such sharper variations in the transit time with the solute's electrophoretic mobility can allow the realization of difficult separations in shorter channels permitting further miniaturization of chip based analysis systems.
Reference:
[1] Pennathur, S; Santiago, J.G. Anal. Chem. 2005, 77(21), 6782-6789