0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Sign in to save

Raman Diffusion-Ordered Spectroscopy

The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2023 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Robert W. Schmidt, Robert W. Schmidt, Giulia Giubertoni, Giulia Giubertoni, Federico Caporaletti, Federico Caporaletti, Robert W. Schmidt, Robert W. Schmidt, Freek Ariese, Freek Ariese, Paul Kolpakov, Freek Ariese, Freek Ariese, Paul Kolpakov, Freek Ariese, Freek Ariese, Noushine Shahidzadeh, Noushine Shahidzadeh, Freek Ariese, Freek Ariese, Freek Ariese, Freek Ariese, Freek Ariese, Freek Ariese, Sander Woutersen Sander Woutersen

Summary

Researchers developed Raman Diffusion-Ordered Spectroscopy (Raman-DOSY), a technique combining diffusion-based size sensitivity with Raman spectral resolution using a Y-channel flow cell where solute molecules diffuse from sample into solvent after flow stops. The method successfully resolved overlapping Raman peaks from molecules of different sizes and was demonstrated on small molecules, proteins, and supramolecular micelles.

The Stokes-Einstein relation, which relates the diffusion coefficient of a molecule to its hydrodynamic radius, is commonly used to determine molecular sizes in chemical analysis methods. Here, we combine the size sensitivity of such diffusion-based methods with the structure sensitivity of Raman spectroscopy by performing Raman diffusion-ordered spectroscopy (Raman-DOSY). The core of the Raman-DOSY setup is a flow cell with a Y-shaped channel containing two inlets: one for the sample solution and one for the pure solvent. The two liquids are injected at the same flow rate, giving rise to two parallel laminar flows in the channel. After the flow stops, the solute molecules diffuse from the solution-filled half of the channel into the solvent-filled half at a rate determined by their hydrodynamic radius. The arrival of the solute molecules in the solvent-filled half of the channel is recorded in a spectrally resolved manner by Raman microspectroscopy. From the time series of Raman spectra, a two-dimensional Raman-DOSY spectrum is obtained, which has the Raman frequency on one axis and the diffusion coefficient (or equivalently, hydrodynamic radius) on the other. In this way, Raman-DOSY spectrally resolves overlapping Raman peaks arising from molecules of different sizes. We demonstrate Raman-DOSY on samples containing up to three compounds and derive the diffusion coefficients of small molecules, proteins, and supramolecules (micelles), illustrating the versatility of Raman-DOSY. Raman-DOSY is label-free and does not require deuterated solvents and can thus be applied to samples and matrices that might be difficult to investigate with other diffusion-based spectroscopy methods.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper