Activation energy associated with the electromigration of oligosaccharides through viscosity modifier and polymeric additive containing background electrolytes

Electrophoresis
Marta KerekgyartoAndrás Guttman

Abstract

The activation energy related to the electromigration of oligosaccharides can be determined from their measured electrophoretic mobilities at different temperatures. The effects of a viscosity modifier (ethylene glycol) and a polymeric additive (linear polyacrylamide) on the electrophoretic mobility of linear sugar oligomers with α1-4 linked glucose units (maltooligosaccharides) were studied in CE using the activation energy concept. The electrophoretic separations of 8-aminopyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonate-labeled maltooligosaccharides were monitored by LIF detection in the temperature range of 20-50°C, using either 0-60% ethylene glycol (viscosity modifier) or 0-3% linear polyacrylamide (polymeric additive) containing BGEs. Activation energy curves were constructed based on the slopes of the Arrhenius plots. With the use of linear polyacrylamide additive, solute size-dependent activation energy variations were found for the maltooligosaccharides with polymerization degrees below and above maltoheptaose (DP 7), probably due to molecular conformation changes and possible matrix interaction effects.

References

Dec 1, 1991·Electrophoresis·P Bocek, A Chrambach
Aug 1, 1985·Biopolymers·O J LumpkinB H Zimm
Oct 15, 1993·Journal of Chromatography. a·A E BarronH W Blanch

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Citations

Jan 4, 2018·Analytical Chemistry·Robert L C VoetenGovert W Somsen

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