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C4Derpillar: Open CE-C⁴D

Open Capillary Electrophoresis platform utilising a Capacitively-Coupled Contactless Conductivity Detector geared for on-line water analysis

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An affordable open capillary electrophoresis (CE) platform with wireless C⁴D detection. By bringing the cost of a USD $~40, 000 laboratory instrument to under $500, citizen scientists and biohackers will be capable of real world feats such as:

• Continuously measuring anions and cations in hydroponic nutrients/waterways.
• Measuring the nutritional content of food
• DNA sequencing (selective breeding of crop varieties)
• PCR product analysis (low cost biotech teaching)
• Cloud analysis of environmental parameters (community awareness)

To show the potential of C⁴Derpillar to solve water-related health issues in the third world, we are building a reference implementation of it as an automated, cloud-connected water testing device, capable of measuring the concentrations of individual anions and cations (including heavy metals) directly from water sources such as rivers.

The team at C⁴Derpillar have set these goals for the 2015 Hackaday Prize:

  • Develop an open-source Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) Capacitively-Coupled Contactless Conductivity Detection (C⁴D) platform for under USD $500.
  • Demonstrate the effectiveness of the platform by developing an affordable water testing unit capable of taking automated measurements of nutrient levels in a water system.
  • Effectively communicate our use of open-source technology and academic research to contribute back to the open community and establish a public global monitoring network.

Semifinal Update

As of 22/9/2015, we have received and assembled the exciter and detector PCBs and are in the process of prototyping the plumbing of the system in order to conduct a trial separation!

So far we've written code to control our programmable function generator and have tested our voltage amplifier circuitry. We have also written code that lets us run various 'diagnostics' over serial such as dumping the output from the ADC and resetting the device.

Using a digital potentiometer to control the excitation voltage is proving problematic as we could not even get it to show on the I2C bus! At the moment, we are using a fixed resistor to yield ~50V as the excitation signal.

Our next task is to diagnose a fault within our solid state relays (they won't turn on so we can't do a trial separation!) and start characterising the output signal from the system (noise floor of the signal, standard error, SNR). Fortunately, the detection circuitry (the meat of the whole project) appears to be operating within parameters, so all we need to do now is push some liquid down a tube - something that proved elusive all of Sunday night :(

After this is taken care of, it's time to put the unit into appropriate housing (so that it is portable), start developing a nicer user interface (cloud data storage and administration) and conduct a shedload of tests on the device.

At the moment, the project looks like it will stay within budget (more details to come in detailed costings).

Below is our short video for the Semifinal round, showing some hyperlapses of us building various parts of the system. Stay tuned for the next instalment, which will feature a full Electrophoretic separation of river water and finally demonstrate just how innovative our device is!


What problem are we solving?

The United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon states that every year, more people are killed by unsafe water, than all forms of violence, including war. It is thought that the primary source of water pollution is inadequately managed industrial and agricultural waste. This disproportionately affects developing countries, which are industry-rich but lack the resources to effectively police strict environmental regulations.

The Executive Director of the United Nations Environmental Programme concedes that the lack of resources for monitoring and assessment make it difficult to obtain a global picture of water quality. Whilst the technology exists to analyse chemical levels in water, these processes suffer from significant limitations. Traditional techniques, such as ICP-AES and ICP-MS use expensive (USD $50, 000 - $0.5mil), complex machines that require the supervision of an expert operator. These operational requirements make it impossible to obtain regular readings over a wide range of remote monitoring sites, limiting the conclusions we can draw from water quality data.

The same publication laments that traditional methods lack the spatial and temporal resolution to draw effective conclusions regarding water quality. This information gap is not only an issue in developing countries, as the Animas river incident of August, 2015 has shown us. An accidental spill of from an abandoned mine by the US Environmental Protection Agency led to the release of 3 million gallons of industrial waste which affected 3 states. The EPA was criticised for delaying the release of an analysis conducted on the water while confusion existed in...

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  • 1 × Bio-Chem 3-way Valve 080T3 24v (essentially 3 solenoids)
  • 2 × Nema 17 Stepper Motor 45Ncm To Drive Syringe Pump
  • 2 × NResearch 2-way Valve 225T01 24v (For in/out selection on pumps)
  • 2 × 5ml Luer Lock Syringe Syringe pump
  • 2 × 5mm to 8mm shaft coupling Syringe Pump

View all 26 components

  • PCBs Have Arrived!

    Taylor Wass09/21/2015 at 20:50 0 comments

    Hi guys, just a quick update re: our detector's excitation and detection circuit boards. They arrived a few days ago from New Zealand - fast, cheap and a very good job done. Not too bad for Reuben's first PCB design job!

    Everything seems to be in working order, except our digital pot won't come online! More troubleshooting ahead. If anyone is experienced in I2C please feel free to contact us!

  • Productised Design: C4Derpillar

    Taylor Wass09/21/2015 at 20:34 0 comments

    Hi All,

    Here's a quick render of what the C4Derpillar will look like. Essentially a box containing all of the circuitry and plumbing with two external ports for taking a sample and dumping waste liquid. There will also be 12 external pins for power, data capture etc.

    It's looks minimalistic from the outside - that's because it is! We don't want wires hanging all over the place if she is operating in outback Queensland! As part of the build instructions in the next round a render of the inside of the device will be available, however we have to model most of the parts ourselves so it takes time (not to mention we have never done this before!)

  • Fabricating the Flow Block

    Taylor Wass09/21/2015 at 20:11 0 comments

    In order to connect our 1/16" tubing to the 365um OD capillary tube used for the separation process, we decided to 3D print a flow block rather than buying the ~$100s commercial units available.

    Each block serves as a connecting point to the capillary tubes through the use of a 1/4"-28 UNF nut. You can see the .STL files we used in our GitHub page LINK

    The T-shaped block gives us a point where an electrode can serve as the ground for both capillaries, so we want it to screw in and sit in the flow path. The I-shaped block simply serves as a union between two 1/4"-28 UNF nuts.

    Everything was printed on ABS as it is resistant to water and prevents biofilm formation. Acetone vapour treatment was used in an effort to better blend the printed layers and prevent leakage.

    Each cylinder is 95% of the minor diameter of a 1/4"-28 UNF tap, which allowed us to easily tap the hole and test out the part by plugging in some tube.


    Thanks to some kind souls on 3DHubs, we were able to get these produced overnight and delivered to our door for less than $20. Our fabricator was even able to remotely clear the bed and restart when we noticed an error in the diameter of the holes.

  • Meet the Team!

    Taylor Wass09/21/2015 at 18:54 0 comments

    Meet the team

    Brought together by a mutual love of beer and Rockhampton, QLD, Australia, our team all contribute their own unique talents to this project, today we’d like to take a chance to introduce ourselves.

    This project was spawned from the collective vision of our team (Reuben Brown, Brett Walker and Taylor Wass) that saw the potential in this innovative technology to provide a cost-effective opportunity to empower in-need communities to monitor the health of their water sources. Originally, we just wanted to measure the nutrients in our fish tanks and hydroponic setups, but the project has grown far beyond this!


    Reuben Brown

    Reuben brings to the table a broad understanding of electronic design, built up from years of tinkering and pouring over the vast wealth of information available online as he was growing up. Despite studying Biology and Analytical Chemistry at QUT, he has continued to be drawn to experimenting with electronics, though he has found that these interests have converged in the C4Derpilar project.

    When he’s not developing our flashy C4D detector & plumbing tiny tubes for the C4Derpillar, he’s busy tinkering on his automated marine tank, which he uses to provide the best environment for rare coral and tropical fish. Reuben originally was drawn to the use of C4D by his fish tank as a way to detect the ions in the water, as the disposable tests were expensive and wasteful.

    Since the team has begun working on this project, Reuben has been invigorated by the various uses this technology could offer, both in assisting communities who suffer from unreliable and often contaminated water supplies but also in integration into smart home installations, to alert families and households of any contaminations in their water (such as the Animals river incident). Reflecting on his youth spent in the Australian bush, he realised that this could be invaluable for the thousands of Queenslanders who rely on bore water to survive the harsh Australian climate.

    Brett Walker

    Brett Walker is our big data (picture) thinker, with a passion for trains. After completing his Bachelor of Science in Mathematics at QUT, Brett went on to do his Honours in decision theory governing the scheduling of trains. This lead to Brett being a key player in a small team that was responsible for delivering an increased number of trains running more efficiently and punctually for a major city’s train network. At least we can always say that he made the trains run on time…

    Brett has utilised his vast skills in the design of big-data systems and decision support tools, making him a key asset in undertaking the analytical side of our project, as well as providing the pivotal programming for our various microcontrollers.


    Brett sees project as a distributed network of precise sensors relaying information to the public in ‘quasi-real-time’, which has enormous benefits as well as fulfilling Brett's keen interest in vast data analysis. Brett’s believes that through utilising big-data analysis, we are capable of generating new and insightful observations that may contributing to the solutions for the big challenges facing humanity, such as Climate Change.


    Taylor Wass

    With his background in Biomedical Science, studying Biotechnology and Genetics at UQ, Taylor Wass has a particular desire to see the C4Derpillar provide affordable and accessible point-of-care diagnostic tools that may be deployed to remote parts of Australia and the world. Having traversed a number of fields in Biomed before settling on his current majors, Taylor has developed a comprehensive knowledge of Chemistry; particularly poignant for this project, he has a breadth of understanding of separation, that will allow us to adapt the system to detect a variety of sample types. Taylor has also worked with Brett to develop the data handling system to put the network in the cloud.

    As we enter a new era of biotechnology, he believes we need to give the public tools to reliably gather this information,...

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  • ​System Design Document - Sequential Injection Analysis System

    Taylor Wass09/21/2015 at 18:32 0 comments

    Tl;dr

    • What is Sequential Injection Analysis (SIA)?
    • Our implementation of SIA
    • Design constraints of automated sampling
    • Description of the plumbing of C4Derpillar

    A key component of any analysis protocol is preparing the sample a user wants to analyse within the constraints of the instrument they are using. In the case of an autonomously-operating field-based analysis system (like the C4Derpillar), we have many unique considerations for the design of this system.

    The C4Derpillar utilises a technique called Sequential Injection Analysis. Essentially it’s a fancy way of saying that we are running multiple samples through the machine without requiring a user to intervene or the machine to be reset. This is achieved by filling a sample reservoir from the user (in the case of fixed operation) or from the environment through a peristaltic pump and then pumping it through the separation system.

    A typical analysis run would start by ‘cleansing’ the system with dilute sodium hydroxide. This serves a dual purpose of washing away residue left over from previous runs and ensuring that the capillary tube walls are fully ionised.

    Once the sample is introduced into the system, we need to mix it with separation buffer so that it can be properly detected by the C4D detector. Another requirement of Sequential Injection Analysis is that we have a constantly flowing ‘stream’ that the sample is introduced into as a ‘plug’. This stream is then directed through the capillary tubes, where separation and detection is achieved. In our design the sample is enclosed by the same separation buffer used to dilute the sample, saving us a lot of hassle!

    After a run, we want to refill the system with dilute sodium hydroxide. This is to ensure that any nasties are washed away and that the capillary tube does not dry out between uses (“if it dries, it dies”).


    While SIA sounds simple in theory, we are analysing small total volumes (in the microlitre range) once the sample stream is introduced into the capillary tube separation system. This means that even minute fluctuations in the injection process will cause a high amount of relative error in readings. If we want to do quantitative work (where we measure the amount of a chemical, rather than just identifying it as you would with a spectrometer like the RamanPi), it is clear that a strategy to introduce a known amount of sample with high precision and repeatability is vital to the success of the endeavour.

    Usually, commercial automated instruments would feature some form of flow selection manifold system that could be used to select between the various liquids we want to mix together (separation buffer, sample, optional chemical modifiers). Unfortunately, these systems are either VERY expensive ($100s) or rely on compressed air for precise actuation of the liquid - something you won’t find in a remote African village.

    We have overcome this issue by using a plumbing system that features a combination of three-way and two-way valves, solenoids and syringe pumps. The valves and solenoids are in a configuration so that they are functionally equivalent to a flow selection manifold. doctek's Simple Syringe Pump provides a resolution of approximately 0.5uL per step of a NEMA 17 stepper motor. As stepper motors produce inherently repeatable actuation across a range of speeds, syringe pumps are ideal for fluid transfer in our device, requiring only a simple 5V signal and a controller.

    By having this known amount of sample introduced in every analysis run, we can use standard solutions of known concentration and construct a linear calibration curve to use the C4D detector response to measure chemicals at unknown concentrations. The academic literature reports C4D detectors to have high linearity, usually over several orders of magnitude, meaning that the detector responds faithfully over a large range of ionic concentrations. This increases the versatility of the instrument in that it can accept a broader range of samples...

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  • Detector System Design Document

    Taylor Wass09/13/2015 at 12:06 2 comments

    Tl;dr

    • C4D detector system design document
    • Review of state-of-the-art in C4D detection
    • Our improvements upon current designs

    As ions are brought into the capillary tube by the separation voltage, they move as distinct bands. The detector system lets the C4Derpillar ‘see’ and measure these bands, enabling us to identify and measure dissolved chemicals. This post aims to serve as a system design document for the C4E detector and show the engineering process taken to achieve our prototype design. For information regarding the physical phenomena behind C4D, please look at Project Log: Conductivity Detection C4D.

    Functional units of the detector

    A sine wave excitation signal is generated by the function generator and amplified to several hundred volts. From here the signal travels through the detection cell and is combined with the signal from the reference cell, positioned such that it is only ever measuring the conductivity of the separation buffer. The phase cancelled signal is rectified and attenuated for detection by an ADC and subsequent data processing. A typical C4D detector can be divided into several functional units, which are explained in detail below:

    Excitation signal generator

    The transmission signal is a vital component of our detection circuitry as the working parameters allow for calibration of the platform for optimal detection sensitivity (Signal-Noise Ratio - SNR). C4D detection operates with an AC sine wave signal at a minimum of tens of kHz to ~10MHz. This is because the signal must be at a sufficient frequency to overcome the minimum working frequency of the system but also within a range to avoid the excitation and detection electrodes becoming coupled so that the sample no longer affects the conductivity reading. As the excitation frequency of the system is increased, heightened sensitivity is typically observed until a point where stray capacitance becomes an issue.

    In the literature a wide variety of excitation signals are used, ranging from 1-200Vp-p at frequencies spanning 20kHz to 10MHz. The research group of Peter Hauser has pioneered using a high voltage source (up to 350V) at a relatively high frequency (200kHz), which was found to offer unique advantages for enhancing the signal-noise ratio (Kuban, et. al, 2006). This is presumably due to the large amplitude of the signal masking any small fluctuations introduced by the environment. Based on his group’s research, we have selected componentry that will be capable of generating a 1kHz-10MHz sine wave at ~16-240Vp-p.

    As the SNR depends heavily upon the excitation frequency and voltage, being able to dynamically optimise these parameters is desirable. Second generation devices, featured the ability to adjust the operating frequency and voltage of the system, however the user is still required to reflow passive SMD components on the circuit board and perform electrical calculations; a hurdle that would prevent novices from achieving this end.

    In our design, signal is generated by an Analogue Devices AD9833 SPI function generator, which produces a sine, square or triangle 0.6Vp-p signal from 0.1Hz–12.5MHz with 0.1Hz resolution. A two-stage op-amp system is used to amplify the excitation signal from 0.5–15Vp-p. This is achieved by using a fixed 20x multiplier op-amp in tandem with a selectable (0.1 – 1.5x) attenuating op-amp, controlled by an Analogue Devices AD5280 I2C digital potentiometer with 256 wiper steps. This staged gain system was required in order to keep us within the gain-bandwidth product specifications of the Analogue AD829 and AD818 op-amps. In this design the pre-transformer signal is limited to 15Vp-p, which is the digital pot terminal voltage maximum working parameter. There are chips on the market with higher terminal voltages but for the moment 15V is right where we want to be, giving us a final working voltage range of ~16–240Vp-p when used in conjunction with our Coilcraft 1:16 wideband RF transformer.

    Being able to adjust the excitation parameters...

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  • Separation chemistry

    Taylor Wass08/17/2015 at 17:37 0 comments

    tl;dr

    • Samples must be dissolved in a separation buffer, which contains 3 primary components dissolved in water.
    • Background electrolyte provides stable reference signal for the conductivity detector and does not migrate in an electric field.
    • pH buffer resists changes in pH driven by the electrolysis of water at the anode and cathode.
    • Chemical modifiers bind to specific analytes, allowing superimposed bands to be resolved.
    • Electroosmotic flow is of concern when analysing anions, and can be modulated with cationic surfactants

    When a sample is introduced into the analysis system, it is usually mixed with a separation (or run) buffer. An ideal buffer needs to perform the following functions:

    • Maintain solution pH at a level that ionises (gives charge to) analytes of interest.
    • Be weakly conductive to facilitate current flow between the electrodes but limit Joule heating within the capillary.
    • Provide a stable baseline signal to the detector over the course of a run.
    • Facilitate effective separation of analytes of interest.

    These ends can be achieved through the addition of a background electrolyte (BGE), pH buffering agents and optional chemical modifiers.

    Background electrolyte (BGE)

    As explained in Project log: What is Capillary Electrophoresis, capillary electrophoresis separates ions by differences in their migration speed through an electric field. Bands of ions are detected as they cross a wireless conductivity detector at different times.

    In order to minimise interference due to stray capacitance and impurities, a background electrolyte (BGE) is usually included in the separation buffer. BGEs are usually weakly conductive and serve to provide a stable reference signal for the detector. An ideal BGE is an ampholyte [wiki] – a molecule that can contain negative and positive charges, depending on the pH. Histidine is commonly used as a BGE in capillary electrophoresis as it exists as a zwitterion (a form having equal positive and negative charges) at the pHs used in most electrophoresis protocols. This prevents it from being affected by the applied electric field, maintaining a uniform distribution of BGE throughout the capillaries over the run.

    Histidine is a relatively safe chemical that can be purchased at low cost, making ideal as a BGE in our system. 250g can be purchased for USD $40, enough for thousands of runs.

    Histidine can be purchased from here:

    http://www.ebay.com/itm/BulkSupplements-Pure-L-Histidine-Base-Powder-/201301522344?var=&hash=item2ede8177a8

    pH buffer

    As electricity is being applied to the water, reactions at the anode and cathodes will generate hydroxyl (OH⁻) and hydronium (H₃O⁺) ions. The local build-up of these species creates zones of varying pH within the electrolyte. This phenomena significantly affects the reproducibility of readings in capillary electrophoresis and as such, a pH buffering agent [wiki] is usually included in the sample buffer. Buffers are able to resist the addition of acid or base and maintain the solution at a constant pH. MES finds use in the majority of electrophoresis publications as a pH buffer for a few reasons. It is also readily available and inexpensive – perfect for us! Using MES as the pH buffer will allow us to adjust the pH from around 5.15 to 7.15.

    MES can be purchased from here:

    http://www.ebay.com/itm/MES-Free-Acid-1-kg-Chemical-for-Molecular-Biology-/161073003402?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item2580b2fb8a

    Chemical Modifiers (optional)

    Sometimes two ions may have similar electrophoretic mobilities, which means that they will migrate down the capillary at very similar speeds. If the length of the capillary is not sufficient, these bands will not separate (resolve), giving a superimposed peak on the detector. It is impossible to identify and quantify analytes of interest if they are part of a superimposed peak, therefore chemical modifiers are sometimes introduced into a separation buffer. Modifiers bind to their targets, usually a particular class of chemical (monovalent cations,...

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  • What is capillary electrophoresis (CE)?

    Taylor Wass08/16/2015 at 06:32 0 comments

    tl;dr

    • Conventional water monitoring systems do not provide meaningful information for environmental monitoring and citizen science applications.
    • This is because samples usually contain many ions and the sensor cannot ‘see’ ions individually to measure them.
    • A separation procedure can be used with our wireless conductivity detector to measure ions individually.
    • Capillary electrophoresis (CE) separates ions based on differences in their electrophoretic mobilities.
    • CE is a simple technique that has been in use for decades and simple protocols are available in the literature for most analytes of interest.

    The C⁴D detector used in our design detects the conductivity of almost all dissolved substances, which is used to infer the total dissolved ion concentration. This technique is commonly implemented in applications that only require knowledge of the total dissolved solids [wiki] (referred to as TDS or ‘ppm’) in a solution, such as in hydroponics, where a user is primarily concerned with aggregate nutrient thresholds for plant growth. When testing the quality of a water supply, we are interested in the levels of particular pollutants that are harmful at small levels, like arsenic. The maximum safe level of arsenic in a water supply is considered to be ~10 μg/L. The traditional TDS-based approach can barely detect a noticeable change in total ion concentration at these levels, let alone single-out arsenic from the jumble of dissolved ions – making TDS measurements functionally useless for most environmental monitoring applications.

    Effective detection of specific analytes (arsenic, mercury, pesticides, etc) is best achieved through separation of the sample into its chemical constituents, allowing them to be identified and quantified individually by a single system (the C⁴D detector).

    Separation techniques

    Separation techniques are not new and usually rely upon variations in a physical property among the ions of a solution. The separation procedure employed in this build is capillary electrophoresis (CE) [wiki]. CE sorts chemicals by differences in electrophoretic mobility, a property unique to each molecule. This is accomplished by drawing the sample into a very thin (10-100μm) ID capillary tube and subjecting it to high voltage (2-30kV) DC. The capillary serves to create an environment with a high surface area/volume ratio, allowing more interactions that facilitate the separation to take place. Separation occurs to a point where ions migrate in independent ‘bands’ sequentially past a stationary detector, enabling them to be identified and measured.

    Adopted from: http://theses.ulaval.ca/archimede/fichiers/24330/apa.html


    The above image represents the expected migration order of ions inside a capillary when it is exposed to an electric field. Note that small, highly charged ions migrate to the electrodes at a higher rate than larger ions with less charge. Anions migrate toward the anode, while cations migrate towards the cathode.

    The signal intensity of the C⁴D detector enclosing the capillary tube can be charted over time to identify and measure the concentrations of individual ions with high repeatability and precision. This can be represented on a graph as an electropherogram. Each peak represents an analyte passing the detector and its magnitude is proportional to the concentration of each substance. Peaks are assigned to a particular analyte by comparing readings to a separation conducted on a standard solution of known constitution. An example electropherogram is shown below:

    Source: http://www.dionex.com/en-us/webdocs/4234-an91.pdf

    So what is actually making this happen in there? As with standard spherical particles, the velocity of charged ions moving in an electric field is the proportional to of the electrokinetic energy introduced to the particleFEK by the electric field E and the particle’s drag Fd in a viscous solution (Stoke’s law).

    ---------- more ----------

    In the case of capillary electrophoresis, an ion’s total electrophoretic...

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  • Conductivity Detection: C⁴D

    Brett Walker08/13/2015 at 13:46 1 comment

    Capacitively Coupled Contactless Conductivity Detection C⁴D

    tl;dr

    • Electrolytic conductivity can measure the dissolved contents of a solution
    • Combined with Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) individual ions can be detected
    • Contact with the solution hindered the development of conductivity detection based CE
    • The expense and inherent limitations of light-based (UV) detection is prohibitive for amateurs
    • Capacitively-Coupled Contactless Conductivity Detection (C⁴D) provides a simple, low-cost detection method
    • Our implementation of C⁴D

    The detection technique we have chosen for this project is based on the measurement of Electrolytic Conductivity [wiki], which is a solution's ability to conduct electricity. This measure contains highly valuable information on the contents of a solution as its conductivity is proportional to the sum of the Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) [wiki]. Measurement of TDS is typically used as an aggregate indicator of chemical contaminants in the study of water quality, particularly relating to agricultural runoff and industrial pollution. Our system utilises this principle in combination with a separation technique to detect specific substances within the TDS. We apply a technique called Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) [wiki] which separates the solution into a series of ionic bands that migrate past a stationary detector at varying times, allowing for individual substances to be identified and quantified.

    Conductivity detection has been employed in CE and chromatography for some time however the initial iterations employed a contact-based approach, typically a fixed eC/TDS probe, which came into direct contact with the solution. While this technique is highly sensitive the electrode is subject to degradation, this causes measurement drift due to heterogeneous oxidation of the electrode surface which diminishes the machine’s precision and operational lifespan.The full potential of the technology was realised with the introduction of contactless detection systems, which led to the development of the technology we have chosen: Capacitively-Coupled Contactless Conductivity Detection (C⁴D). C⁴D utilises the wall of the capillary as a dielectric to wirelessly transmit an electrical signal through the solution which is attenuated by the change in resistance due to the ion concentration.

    The C⁴D technique allows for a much simpler transmission and receipt of the excitation signal over typical light (UV) and contact-based (TDS) detection, without expensive image sensors and complex capillary windows. The versatility of using C⁴D with the CE separated samples means that by manipulating only a few simple parameters of the system almost any substance can be identified and measured. This replicates the function of most Ion Specific Electrodes (ISEs) by utilising a separation technique to get the desired solute by itself, in place of specific electrodes for each solute. The relative simplicity of this technique makes it a highly versatile yet low-cost way to detect the presence of substances in a sample that is highly suited to automated sampling and reporting of water quality.

    The measurement of electrolytic conductivity is achieved by measuring the resistance of the solution. Measuring the resistance involves passing an electrical signal through the solution and measuring the attenuation of the signal as different ions pass the electrodes. Contactless detection in a Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) systems couples electrodes to the capillary forming a picofarad capacitor, which requires a high frequency input signal to transmit current through the solution. As ions pass through the electrode the change in resistance of the solution R causes a change in the resultant current I=V/R. The current of the output signal is converted to a voltage by a transimpedance op-amp (current-voltage conversion) which is then synchronously demodulated into a DC voltage, cleaned of noise and sampled by an onboard ADC. The flowchart below describes the components...

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  • Introduction to C4Dapillary - An open-source C4D-CE Platform

    Brett Walker08/13/2015 at 07:17 0 comments

    Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) using a Capacitively-Coupled Contactless Conductivity Detector (C⁴D).

    tl;dr

    • There are no accessible detection systems for taking automated measurements of water quality, particularly nutrient levels
    • Enter Capillary Electrophoresis (CE), a simple and accurate technique for separating dissolved solids
    • Overcoming the major challenges involved with detecting dissolved solids with Capacitively-Coupled Contactless Conductivity Detection (C⁴D)
    • Realising the potential of an open-source C⁴D CE platform for a global community of water researchers

    Our C⁴Dapillary project began with some hobbyist Aquaculture after discovering we couldn't find a product to autonomously monitor the nutrient levels in our systems. Aquaculture systems require careful and precise control of a range of nutrients. Although, in these natural systems, the levels of these nutrients tend to vary across the day – making manual techniques cumbersome and fraught with error. Research into detection systems failed to find any products meeting capable of reliable, automated measurement of a range of nutrients. Most available sensors only detect select compounds, which meant no alternatives existed outside expensive laboratory-grade equipment. Our strong background in science drove us to research other analytical techniques that could detect the presence of compounds. We uncovered a powerful technique called Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) which allowed for the repeatable detection of ions with different charges without the need for expensive, closed-source components. Unfortunately affordable (<USD$10k) commercial implementations of CE are relatively non-existent which drove the development of the C⁴Dapillary open-source CE platform. This project will focus on the detection of ions in water, given the vast potential for improving Humanity's quality of life, although the potential applications are innumerable.

    Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) works by passing a high voltage current through a solution filling a micron-diameter glass capillary tube. The current passing across the charged ions causes them to migrate from one side of the tube to the other. This causes them to pass the detector at different times allowing them to be mapped onto a chart called an electrophoretogram. This technique was limited in its widespread application as it was often coupled with UV-based optical detectors which are prohibitive due to their expense. Conductivity based detectors offered a cheaper alternative but came into direct contact with the solution, degrading and bio-fouling over time causing spurious measurements. This project uses a detection system that negates the large costs of UV and other spectroscopy based CE implementations by using wireless detection of CE separated ions. This process is superior to Spectroscopy techniques as it removes interaction between ions, a large source of error in separated samples.

    You can imagine this like dropping several different coins off the top of a tall enough building. If you stood on the ground you could determine each of them by the time when they hit the ground, with the lowest surface area to mass ratio first. The following GIF shows how the CE process works,

    This illustrates the Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) technique using a detection system called Contactless Conductivity Capacitively Coupled Detection (C⁴D). C⁴D functions by applying a high-voltage electrical signal across the capillary and reading the signal as it is attenuated by the solution passing through the capillary. The attenuated signal is converted to a DC voltage signal with peaks as each ion passes through the sensor. As the different ions are separated through CE the time the ion passes the detector can be compared to a standard sample and the ion identified.

    The Executive Director of the United Nations Environmental Programme states that the lack of resources for monitoring and assessment make it difficult to obtain a global picture of water quality....

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lister wrote 09/09/2015 at 18:37 point

Interesting project! I look forward to future developments. My home utilizes a water source not far from the Animas spill (relative to Aus anyway, we're a few hours North) and have spent several years characterizing it. The contaminant levels can vary by a factor of 6 during the year, and the trend is that each year the magnitude increases. We are currently at 1.3 mg/L for As (~130X EPA limits) during the peak and also exceed levels for other nasty metals such as Thallium. 

I've also been involved with testing other contaminated water sources, and spatial+temporal variability seems to be the norm - however, most people never test more than once (if at all). Only a coliform test is needed for property transfers in Colorado. One issue is that the assumptions for media filter flow rates and sizing (used for removal) are often inadequate. Anomalous aperiodic spikes in contaminants are also often missed in many of the water sources around here - because of all the variability, an in situ monitor (if possible) would be great.

Testing fees add up quick and ordering a test presumes you have a priori knowledge, for example, Thallium requires a special request at our state labs and is not included on the "Metals scan" or "Mining" testing packages, despite several hundred dollars in fees.

Are you aware of a review paper that characterizes the CE-C4D approach for several ion species relative to ICP-MS (which seems to be the benchmark for most testing)? I assume that before undertaking this project you must have had access to this type of data.

I'd be happy to test prototypes for you in a real world setting. I have some experience in analytical chemistry and well plumbing (along with EE and software since I'm on HAD) and a lot of historical data to correlate against. I'd also validate against the ICP-MS testing I already run. 

Good luck with the project.

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Taylor Wass wrote 09/21/2015 at 22:27 point

Hi Lister!

First of all, it's great to read your comment - we are most certainly looking for people exactly like yourself to help us calibrate/test the device :)

That level of As is very high! We were a little dubious declaring that the system may be able to detect Arsenic but only because the limits in Europe are so LOW! The EPA standard is much higher (and detectable) and to have 130X that... :O

There is a reference saying we can detect As down to the ug/L - will just have to find it.

Regarding Thallium, I did find a reference where it was detected to 38ppb (with ampometric detection - not C4D):

https://books.google.com.au/books?id=Wn_dpL5OcKwC&pg=PA438&lpg=PA438&dq=thallium+capillary+electrophoresis&source=bl&ots=k_Be-3tCLg&sig=-tgTcHHBjdYPRxOPum9seQT_38g&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CCcQ6AEwAWoVChMIx7-aoZSJyAIVJCCmCh1bngHQ#v=onepage&q=thallium capillary ...

Regarding the comparison to things like ICP-MS, you are going to get better sensitivity/accuracy with ICP-MS, however these systems do give quite a good result for comparatively next to nothing.

There is a good thesis linked in the detector design document that compares C4D with other capillary electrophoresis detection methods, but I will search for your request and get back to you!

I would love to get in touch ASAP as we do need a hand with some EE aspects (I2C) and simple stuff like constructing command bytes (every darn example always just sends 0 :P) :)

PLEASE email me @ taylor.wass@uqconnect.edu.au so we can chat :)

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lister wrote 11/12/2015 at 21:01 point

Sorry for the delayed response. I stopped checking a few days after my post and didn't realize you'd later responded.

Did you drop this project? Shame it didn't go further in the HAD prize, I thought it had potential.

I'd still be interested in the paper(s) comparing ICP-MS to the C4D approach for different metal ion species.

Regarding your problems with I2C, if you're still getting stuck, I have a friend I could query if you have specific questions.

I'll send you an email too.

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Taylor Wass wrote 08/29/2015 at 00:18 point

Thanks mate! Stay tuned for some more updates this weekend :) 

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Michael Vowles wrote 08/28/2015 at 12:09 point

Congrats on getting to the semis lads!

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