posted on 2021-05-19, 21:04authored byJulie Probst, Philip Howes, Paolo Arosio, Stavros Stavrakis, Andrew deMello
Picoliter-volume
droplets within segmented flows can be probed
in a rapid and efficient manner using optical detection methods. To
date, however, most detection schemes for droplet content analysis
have relied on the use of time-integrated fluorescence measurements.
Despite its undoubted utility, the implementation of absorbance-based
detectors is particularly challenging due to the reduced optical path
lengths that are characteristic of microfluidic systems and deleterious
scattering at droplet–oil interfaces. Unsurprisingly, efforts
to develop sensitive absorbance-based detection schemes for the interrogation
of rapidly moving droplets have primarily focused on ensuring adequate
analytical sensitivity and, to date, have been exclusively limited
to single-wavelength measurements. To address this limitation, and
expand the information content associated with absorbance measurements
on-chip, we herein describe a detection scheme for the extraction
of broad-band absorbance spectra from pL-volume droplets with high
sensitivity. The combination of a confocal optical system (that confines
incident light to a reduced detection volume) and a postprocessing
algorithm (that effectively removes the contribution of the carrier
oil from the extracted spectra) engenders significant improvements
in signal-to-noise ratios. Our system is initially calibrated by acquiring
absorbance spectra from aqueous solutions of fluorescein isothiocyanate.
These measurements confirm both excellent linearity over the studied
range (from 0 to 100 μM) and a concentration limit of detection
of 800 nM. The methodology is then used to monitor the salt-induced
aggregation of gold nanoparticles with millisecond time resolution.
This approach for small-volume absorbance spectroscopy allows for
both high-throughput and high-information content measurements in
subnanoliter volumes and will be highly desirable in a wide variety
of bioanalytical applications where sensitivity and throughput are
priorities.