Highly Integrated μGC Based on a Multisensing Progressive Cellular Architecture with a Valveless Sample Inlet

Anal Chem. 2023 Jan 31;95(4):2157-2167. doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c01818. Epub 2023 Jan 13.

Abstract

Microscale gas chromatographs (μGCs) promise in-field analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in environmental and industrial monitoring, healthcare, and homeland security applications. As a step toward addressing challenges with performance and manufacturability, this study reports a highly integrated monolithic chip implementing a multisensing progressive cellular architecture. This architecture incorporates three μGC cells that are customized for different ranges of analyte volatility; each cell includes a preconcentrator and separation column, two complementary capacitive detectors, and a photoionization detector (PID). An on-chip carrier gas filter scrubs ambient air for the analysis. The monolithic chip, with all 16 components, is 40.3 × 55.7 mm2 in footprint. To accommodate surface adsorptive and low-volatility analytes, the architecture eliminates the commonly used inlet valve, eliminating the need for chemically inactive surfaces in the valves and pumps, allowing the use of standard parts. Representative analysis is demonstrated from a nonpolar 14-analyte mixture, a polar 12-analyte mixture, and a 3-phosphonate ester mixture, covering a wide vapor pressure range (0.005-68.5 kPa) and dielectric constant range (1.8-23.2). The three types of detectors show highly complementary responses. Quantitative analysis is shown in the tens to hundreds ppb range. With 200 mL samples, the projected detection limits reach 0.12-4.7 ppb. Limited tests performed at 80% humidity showed that the analytes with vapor pressures <12 kPa were unaffected. A typical full run takes 28 min and consumes 2.3 kJ energy for the fluidic elements (excluding electronics). By eliminating chip-to-chip fluidic interconnections and requiring just one custom-fabricated element, this work presents a path toward high-performance and highly manufacturable μGCs.