Confocal Raman Microscopy for Monitoring Chemical Reactions on Single Optically Trapped, Solid-Phase Support Particles

Optical trapping of small structures is a powerful tool for the manipulation and investigation of colloidal and particulate materials. The tight focus excitation requirements of optical trapping are well suited to confocal Raman microscopy. In this work, an inverted confocal Raman microscope is deve...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analytical chemistry (Washington) 2002-09, Vol.74 (17), p.4311-4319
Hauptverfasser: Houlne, Michael P, Sjostrom, Christopher M, Uibel, Rory H, Kleimeyer, James A, Harris, Joel M
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container_end_page 4319
container_issue 17
container_start_page 4311
container_title Analytical chemistry (Washington)
container_volume 74
creator Houlne, Michael P
Sjostrom, Christopher M
Uibel, Rory H
Kleimeyer, James A
Harris, Joel M
description Optical trapping of small structures is a powerful tool for the manipulation and investigation of colloidal and particulate materials. The tight focus excitation requirements of optical trapping are well suited to confocal Raman microscopy. In this work, an inverted confocal Raman microscope is developed for studies of chemical reactions on single, optically trapped particles and applied to reactions used in solid-phase peptide synthesis. Optical trapping and levitation allow a particle to be moved away from the coverslip and into solution, avoiding fluorescence interference from the coverslip. More importantly, diffusion of reagents into the particle is not inhibited by a surface, so that reaction conditions mimic those of particles dispersed in solution. Optical trapping and levitation also maintain optical alignment, since the particle is centered laterally along the optical axis and within the focal plane of the objective, where both optical forces and light collection are maximized. Hour-long observations of chemical reactions on individual, trapped silica particles are reported. Using two-dimensional least-squares analysis methods, the Raman spectra collected during the course of a reaction can be resolved into component contributions. The resolved spectra of the time-varying species can be observed, as they bind to or cleave from the particle surface.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/ac020325t
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subjects Analytical chemistry
Chemical reactions
Chemistry
Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques - methods
Equipment Design
Exact sciences and technology
General, instrumentation
Innovations
Microscopes
Microscopy, Confocal
Peptides - chemical synthesis
Resins, Synthetic
Spectrometric and optical methods
Spectrum Analysis, Raman - instrumentation
Spectrum Analysis, Raman - methods
title Confocal Raman Microscopy for Monitoring Chemical Reactions on Single Optically Trapped, Solid-Phase Support Particles
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