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Electrophoretic light scattering

Electrophoretic light scattering (also known as laser Doppler electrophoresis and phase analysis light scattering ) is based on dynamic light scattering. The frequency shift or phase shift of an incident laser beam depends on the dispersed particles mobility. With dynamic light scattering, Brownian motion causes particle motion. With electrophoretic light scattering, oscillating electric field performs this function.

The method is used for measuring electrophoretic mobility, from which zeta potential can then be calculated. Instruments for applying the method are commercially available from several manufacturers. The last set of calculations requires information on viscosity and dielectric permittivity of the dispersion medium; appropriate electrophoresis theory is also required. Sample dilution is often necessary to eliminate multiple scattering of the incident laser beam and/or particle interactions.

Instrumentation edit

 
Fig.3. Commercial heterodyne optical system of an electrophoretic light scattering instrument with a modulator (from Ref. 11).

A laser beam passes through the electrophoresis cell, irradiates the particles dispersed in it, and is scattered by the particles. The scattered light is detected by a photo-multiplier after passing through two pinholes. There are two types of optical systems: heterodyne and fringe. Ware and Flygare [1] developed a heterodyne-type ELS instrument, that was the first instrument of this type. In a fringe optics ELS instrument,[2] a laser beam is divided into two beams. Those cross inside the electrophresis cell at a fixed angle to produce a fringe pattern. The scattered light from the particles, which migrates inside the fringe, is intensity-modulated. The frequency shifts from both types of optics obey the same equations. The observed spectra resemble each other. Oka et al. developed an ELS instrument of heterodyne-type optics[3] that is now available commercially. Its optics is shown in Fig. 3.

If the frequencies of the intersecting laser beams are the same then it is not possible to resolve the direction of the motion of the migrating particles. Instead, only the magnitude of the velocity (i.e., the speed) can be determined. Hence, the sign of the zeta potential cannot be ascertained. This limitation can be overcome by shifting the frequency of one of the beams relative to the other. Such shifting may be referred to as frequency modulation or, more colloquially, just modulation. Modulators used in ELS may include piezo-actuated mirrors or acousto-optic modulators. This modulation scheme is employed by the heterodyne light scattering method, too.

Phase-analysis light scattering (PALS) is a method for evaluating zeta potential, in which the rate of phase change of the interference between light scattered by the sample and the modulated reference beam is analyzed. This rate is compared with a mathematically generated sine wave predetermined by the modulator frequency.[4] The application of large fields, which can lead to sample heating and breakdown of the colloids is no longer required. But any non-linearity of the modulator or any change in the characteristics of the modulator with time will mean that the generated sine wave will no longer reflect the real conditions, and the resulting zeta-potential measurements become less reliable.

A further development of the PALS technique is the so-called "continuously monitored PALS" (cmPALS) technique, which addresses the non-linearity of the modulators. An extra modulator detects the interference between the modulated and unmodulated laser light. Thus, its beat frequency is solely the modulation frequency and is therefore independent of the electrophoretic motion of the particles. This results in faster measurements, higher reproducibility even at low applied electric fields as well as higher sensitivity of the measurement.[5]

Heterodyne light scattering edit

The frequency of light scattered by particles undergoing electrophoresis is shifted by the amount of the Doppler effect,   from that of the incident light, :  . The shift can be detected by means of heterodyne optics in which the scattering light is mixed with the reference light. The autocorrelation function of intensity of the mixed light,  , can be approximately described by the following damped cosine function [7].

 

where   is a decay constant and A, B, and C are positive constants dependent on the optical system.

Damping frequency   is an observed frequency, and is the frequency difference between scattered and reference light.

 

where   is the frequency of scattered light,   the frequency of the reference light,   the frequency of incident light (laser light), and   the modulation frequency.

The power spectrum of mixed light, namely the Fourier transform of  , gives a couple of Lorenz functions at   having a half-width of   at the half maximum.

In addition to these two, the last term in equation (1) gives another Lorenz function at  

The Doppler shift of frequency and the decay constant are dependent on the geometry of the optical system and are expressed respectively by the equations.

 

and

 

where   is velocity of the particles,   is the amplitude of the scattering vector, and   is the translational diffusion constant of particles.

The amplitude of the scattering vector   is given by the equation

 

Since velocity   is proportional to the applied electric field,  , the apparent electrophoretic mobility   is define by the equation

 

Finally, the relation between the Doppler shift frequency and mobility is given for the case of the optical configuration of Fig. 3 by the equation

 

where   is the strength of the electric field,   the refractive index of the medium,  , the wavelength of the incident light in vacuum, and   the scattering angle. The sign of   is a result of vector calculation and depends on the geometry of the optics.

The spectral frequency can be obtained according to Eq. (2). When  , Eq. (2) is modified and expressed as

 

The modulation frequency   can be obtained as the damping frequency without an electric field applied.

The particle diameter is obtained by assuming that the particle is spherical. This is called the hydrodynamic diameter,   .

 

where   is Boltzmann coefficient,   is the absolute temperature, and   the dynamic viscosity of the surrounding fluid.

Profile of Electro-Osmotic Flow edit

Figure 4 shows two examples of heterodyne autocorrelation functions of scattered light from sodium polystyrene sulfate solution (NaPSS; MW 400,000; 4 mg/mL in 10 mM NaCl). The oscillating correlation function shown by Fig. 4a is a result of interference between the scattered light and the modulated reference light. The beat of Fig. 4b includes additionally the contribution from the frequency changes of light scattered by PSS molecules under an electrical field of 40 V/cm.

Figure 5 shows heterodyne power spectra obtained by Fourier transform of the autocorrelation functions shown in Fig. 4.

Figure 6 shows plots of Doppler shift frequencies measured at various cell depth and electric field strengths, where a sample is the NaPSS solution. These parabolic curves are called profiles of electro-osmotic flow and indicate that the velocity of the particles changed at different depth. The surface potential of the cell wall produces electro-osmotic flow. Since the electrophoresis chamber is a closed system, backward flow is produced at the center of the cell. Then the observed mobility or velocity from Eq. (7) is a result of the combination of osmotic flow and electrophoretic movement.

Electrophoretic mobility analysis has been studied by Mori and Okamoto [16], who have taken into account the effect of electro-osmotic flow at the side wall.

The profile of velocity or mobility at the center of the cell is given approximately by Eq. (11) for the case where k>5.

 

where

  cell depth
  apparent electrophoretic velocity of particle at position z.
  true electrophoretic velocity of the particles.
  thickness of the cell
  average velocity of osmotic flow at upper and lower cell wall.
  difference between velocities of osmotic flow at upper and lower cell wall.
 
  , a ratio between two side lengths of the rectangular cross section.

The parabolic curve of frequency shift caused by electro-osmotic flow shown in Fig. 6 fits with Eq. (11) with application of the least squares method.

Since the mobility is proportional to a frequency shift of the light scattered by a particle and the migrating velocity of a particle as indicated by Eq. (7), all the velocity, mobility, and frequency shifts are expressed by parabolic equations. Then the true electrophoretic mobility of a particle, the electro-osmotic mobility at the upper and lower cell walls, ware obtained. The frequency shift caused only by the electrophoresis of particles is equal to the apparent mobility at the stationary layer.

The velocity of the electrophoretic migration thus obtained is proportional to the electric field as shown in Fig. 7. The frequency shift increases with increase of the scattering angle as shown in Fig. 8. This result is in agreement with the theoretical Eq. (7).

Applications edit

Electrophoretic Light Scattering (ELS) is primarily used for characterizing the surface charges of colloidal particles like macromolecules or synthetic polymers (ex. polystyrene[6]) in liquid media in an electric field. In addition to information about surface charges, ELS can also measure the particle size of proteins [7] and determine the zeta potential distribution.

Biophysics edit

ELS is useful for characterizing information about the surface of proteins. Ware and Flygare (1971) demonstrated that electrophoretic techniques can be combined with laser beat spectroscopy in order to simultaneously determine the electrophoretic mobility and diffusion coefficient of bovine serum albumin.[8] The width of a Doppler shifted spectrum of light that is scattered from a solution of macromolecules is proportional to the diffusion coefficient.[9] The Doppler shift is proportional to the electrophoretic mobility of a macromolecule.[10] From studies that have applied this method to poly (L-lysine), ELS is believed to monitor fluctuation mobilities in the presence of solvents with varying salt concentrations.[11] It has also been shown that electrophoretic mobility data can be converted to zeta potential values, which enables the determination of the isoelectric point of proteins and the number of electrokinetic charges on the surface.[12]

Other biological macromolecules that can be analyzed with ELS include polysaccharides. pKa values of chitosans can be calculated from the dependency of electrophoretic mobility values on pH and charge density.[13] Like proteins, the size and zeta potential of chitosans can be determined through ELS.[14]

ELS has also been applied to nucleic acids and viruses. The technique can be extended to measure electrophoretic mobilities of large bacteria molecules at low ionic strengths.[15]

Nanoparticles edit

ELS has been used to characterize the polydispersity, nanodispersity, and stability of single-walled carbon nanotubes in an aqueous environment with surfactants.[citation needed] The technique can be used in combination with dynamic light scattering to measure these properties of nanotubes in many different solvents.

References edit

  1. ^ Ware, B.R; Flygare, W.H (1972). "Light scattering in mixtures of BSA, BSA dimers, and fibrinogen under the influence of electric fields". Journal of Colloid and Interface Science. Elsevier BV. 39 (3): 670–675. doi:10.1016/0021-9797(72)90075-6. ISSN 0021-9797.
  2. ^ Josefowicz, J.; Hallett, F. R. (1975-03-01). "Homodyne Electrophoretic Light Scattering of Polystyrene Spheres by Laser Cross-Beam Intensity Correlation". Applied Optics. The Optical Society. 14 (3): 740. doi:10.1364/ao.14.000740. ISSN 0003-6935.
  3. ^ K. Oka, W. Otani, K. Kameyama, M. Kidai, and T. Takagi, Appl. Theor. Electrophor. 1: 273-278 (1990).
  4. ^ "Zetasizer Nano User Manual" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2015-09-08. Retrieved 29 September 2021.
  5. ^ Bellman, C.; Caspari, A.; Moitzi, C.; Babick, F. (2019). Dynamic and Electrophoretic Light Scattering. Anton Paar GmbH. ISBN 978-3-200-06702-8.
  6. ^ Okubo, Tsuneo; Suda, Mitsuhiro (1999). "Absorption of Polyelectrolytes on Colloidal Surfaces as Studied by Electrophoretic and Dynamic Light-Scattering Techniques". Journal of Colloid and Interface Science. Elsevier BV. 213 (2): 565–571. doi:10.1006/jcis.1999.6171. ISSN 0021-9797.
  7. ^ Boevé, E.R.; Cao, L.C.; De Bruijn, W.C.; Robertson, W.G.; Romijn, J.C.; Schröder, F.H. (1994). "Zeta Potential Distribution on Calcium Oxalate Crystal and Tamm-Horsfall Protein Surface Analyzed with Doppler Electrophoretic Light Scattering". Journal of Urology. Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health). 152 (2 Part 1): 531–536. doi:10.1016/s0022-5347(17)32788-x. ISSN 0022-5347.
  8. ^ Ware, B.R.; Flygare, W.H. (1971). "The simultaneous measurement of the electrophoretic mobility and diffusion coefficient in bovine serum albumin solutions by light scattering". Chemical Physics Letters. Elsevier BV. 12 (1): 81–85. doi:10.1016/0009-2614(71)80621-8. ISSN 0009-2614.
  9. ^ Cummins, H. Z.; Knable, N.; Yeh, Y. (1964-02-10). "Observation of Diffusion Broadening of Rayleigh Scattered Light". Physical Review Letters. American Physical Society (APS). 12 (6): 150–153. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.12.150. ISSN 0031-9007.
  10. ^ W.H. Flygare, The effect of an electric field on the Rayleigh scattered light from a solution of macromolecules, Report No. III, ARPA Contract No. DAHC-15-67-C-0062 to the Materials Research Laboratory, University of Michigan.
  11. ^ Wilcoxon, Jess P.; Schurr, J. Michael (1983-03-15). "Electrophoretic light scattering studies of poly(L‐lysine) in the ordinary and extraordinary phase. Effects of salt, molecular weight, and polyion concentration". The Journal of Chemical Physics. AIP Publishing. 78 (6): 3354–3364. doi:10.1063/1.445211. ISSN 0021-9606.
  12. ^ Jachimska, Barbara; Wasilewska, Monika; Adamczyk, Zbigniew (2008). "Characterization of Globular Protein Solutions by Dynamic Light Scattering, Electrophoretic Mobility, and Viscosity Measurements". Langmuir. American Chemical Society (ACS). 24 (13): 6866–6872. doi:10.1021/la800548p. ISSN 0743-7463.
  13. ^ Strand, Sabina P.; Tømmeraas, Kristoffer; Vårum, Kjell M.; Østgaard, Kjetill (2001). "Electrophoretic Light Scattering Studies of Chitosans with Different Degrees ofN-acetylation". Biomacromolecules. American Chemical Society (ACS). 2 (4): 1310–1314. doi:10.1021/bm015598x. ISSN 1525-7797.
  14. ^ Jiang, Hu-Lin; Kim, You-Kyoung; Arote, Rohidas; Nah, Jae-Woon; Cho, Myung-Haing; Choi, Yun-Jaie; Akaike, Toshihiro; Cho, Chong-Su (2007). "Chitosan-graft-polyethylenimine as a gene carrier". Journal of Controlled Release. Elsevier BV. 117 (2): 273–280. doi:10.1016/j.jconrel.2006.10.025. ISSN 0168-3659.
  15. ^ Hartford, S. L.; Flygare, W. H. (1975). "Electrophoretic Light Scattering on Calf Thymus Deoxyribonucleic Acid and Tobacco Mosaic Virus". Macromolecules. American Chemical Society (ACS). 8 (1): 80–83. doi:10.1021/ma60043a019. ISSN 0024-9297.

(1) Surfactant Science Series, Consulting Editor Martin J. Schick Consultant New York, Vol. 76 Electrical Phenomena at Interfaces Second Edition, Fundamentals, Measurements and Applications, Second Edition, Revised and Expanded. Ed by Hiroyuki Ohshima, Kunio Furusawa. 1998. K. Oka and K. Furusawa, Chapter 8 Electrophresis, p. 152 - 223. Marcel Dekker, Inc,

(7) B.R. Ware and D.D. Haas, in Fast Method in Physical Biochemistry and Cell Biology. (R.I. Sha'afi and S.M. Fernandez, Eds), Elsevier, New York, 1983, Chap. 8.

(9) Ware, B.R; Flygare, W.H (1972). "Light scattering in mixtures of BSA, BSA dimers, and fibrinogen under the influence of electric fields". Journal of Colloid and Interface Science. Elsevier BV. 39 (3): 670–675. doi:10.1016/0021-9797(72)90075-6. ISSN 0021-9797.

(10) Josefowicz, J.; Hallett, F. R. (1975-03-01). "Homodyne Electrophoretic Light Scattering of Polystyrene Spheres by Laser Cross-Beam Intensity Correlation". Applied Optics. The Optical Society. 14 (3): 740. doi:10.1364/ao.14.000740. ISSN 0003-6935.

(11) K. Oka, W. Otani, K. Kameyama, M. Kidai, and T. Takagi, Appl. Theor. Electrophor. 1: 273-278 (1990).

(12) K. Oka, W. Otani, Y. Kubo, Y. Zasu, and M. Akagi, U.S. Patent Appl. 465, 186: Jpn. Patent H7-5227 (1995).

(16) S. Mori and H. Okamoto, Flotation 28: 1 (1980). (in Japanese): Fusen 28(3): 117 (1980).

(17) M. Smoluchowski, in Handbuch der Electrizitat und des Magnetismus. (L. Greatz. Ed). Barth, Leripzig, 1921, pp. 379.

(18) P. White, Phil. Mag. S 7, 23, No. 155 (1937).

(19) S. Komagat, Res. Electrotech. Lab. (Jpn) 348, March 1933.

(20) Y. Fukui, S. Yuu and K. Ushiki, Power Technol. 54: 165 (1988).

electrophoretic, light, scattering, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Electrophoretic light scattering news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Electrophoretic light scattering also known as laser Doppler electrophoresis and phase analysis light scattering is based on dynamic light scattering The frequency shift or phase shift of an incident laser beam depends on the dispersed particles mobility With dynamic light scattering Brownian motion causes particle motion With electrophoretic light scattering oscillating electric field performs this function The method is used for measuring electrophoretic mobility from which zeta potential can then be calculated Instruments for applying the method are commercially available from several manufacturers The last set of calculations requires information on viscosity and dielectric permittivity of the dispersion medium appropriate electrophoresis theory is also required Sample dilution is often necessary to eliminate multiple scattering of the incident laser beam and or particle interactions Contents 1 Instrumentation 2 Heterodyne light scattering 3 Profile of Electro Osmotic Flow 4 Applications 4 1 Biophysics 4 2 Nanoparticles 5 ReferencesInstrumentation edit nbsp Fig 3 Commercial heterodyne optical system of an electrophoretic light scattering instrument with a modulator from Ref 11 A laser beam passes through the electrophoresis cell irradiates the particles dispersed in it and is scattered by the particles The scattered light is detected by a photo multiplier after passing through two pinholes There are two types of optical systems heterodyne and fringe Ware and Flygare 1 developed a heterodyne type ELS instrument that was the first instrument of this type In a fringe optics ELS instrument 2 a laser beam is divided into two beams Those cross inside the electrophresis cell at a fixed angle to produce a fringe pattern The scattered light from the particles which migrates inside the fringe is intensity modulated The frequency shifts from both types of optics obey the same equations The observed spectra resemble each other Oka et al developed an ELS instrument of heterodyne type optics 3 that is now available commercially Its optics is shown in Fig 3 If the frequencies of the intersecting laser beams are the same then it is not possible to resolve the direction of the motion of the migrating particles Instead only the magnitude of the velocity i e the speed can be determined Hence the sign of the zeta potential cannot be ascertained This limitation can be overcome by shifting the frequency of one of the beams relative to the other Such shifting may be referred to as frequency modulation or more colloquially just modulation Modulators used in ELS may include piezo actuated mirrors or acousto optic modulators This modulation scheme is employed by the heterodyne light scattering method too Phase analysis light scattering PALS is a method for evaluating zeta potential in which the rate of phase change of the interference between light scattered by the sample and the modulated reference beam is analyzed This rate is compared with a mathematically generated sine wave predetermined by the modulator frequency 4 The application of large fields which can lead to sample heating and breakdown of the colloids is no longer required But any non linearity of the modulator or any change in the characteristics of the modulator with time will mean that the generated sine wave will no longer reflect the real conditions and the resulting zeta potential measurements become less reliable A further development of the PALS technique is the so called continuously monitored PALS cmPALS technique which addresses the non linearity of the modulators An extra modulator detects the interference between the modulated and unmodulated laser light Thus its beat frequency is solely the modulation frequency and is therefore independent of the electrophoretic motion of the particles This results in faster measurements higher reproducibility even at low applied electric fields as well as higher sensitivity of the measurement 5 Heterodyne light scattering editThe frequency of light scattered by particles undergoing electrophoresis is shifted by the amount of the Doppler effect y D displaystyle upsilon D nbsp from that of the incident light y displaystyle upsilon nbsp The shift can be detected by means of heterodyne optics in which the scattering light is mixed with the reference light The autocorrelation function of intensity of the mixed light g t displaystyle g tau nbsp can be approximately described by the following damped cosine function 7 g t A B exp G t cos 2 p y o C exp 2 G t 1 displaystyle g tau A B exp Gamma tau cos 2 pi upsilon o C exp 2 Gamma tau qquad 1 nbsp where G displaystyle Gamma nbsp is a decay constant and A B and C are positive constants dependent on the optical system Damping frequency y o displaystyle upsilon o nbsp is an observed frequency and is the frequency difference between scattered and reference light y o y s y r y i y D y i y M 2 displaystyle upsilon o upsilon s upsilon r upsilon i upsilon D upsilon i upsilon M qquad 2 nbsp where y s displaystyle upsilon s nbsp is the frequency of scattered light y r displaystyle upsilon r nbsp the frequency of the reference light y i displaystyle upsilon i nbsp the frequency of incident light laser light and y M displaystyle upsilon M nbsp the modulation frequency The power spectrum of mixed light namely the Fourier transform of g t displaystyle g tau nbsp gives a couple of Lorenz functions at D y displaystyle pm Delta upsilon nbsp having a half width of G 2 p displaystyle Gamma 2 pi nbsp at the half maximum In addition to these two the last term in equation 1 gives another Lorenz function at y 0 displaystyle upsilon 0 nbsp The Doppler shift of frequency and the decay constant are dependent on the geometry of the optical system and are expressed respectively by the equations y D V q 2 p 3 displaystyle upsilon D frac Vq 2 pi qquad 3 nbsp and G D q 2 4 displaystyle Gamma D q 2 qquad 4 nbsp where V displaystyle V nbsp is velocity of the particles q displaystyle q nbsp is the amplitude of the scattering vector and D displaystyle D nbsp is the translational diffusion constant of particles The amplitude of the scattering vector q displaystyle q nbsp is given by the equation q 4 p n l 0 sin 8 2 5 displaystyle q frac 4 pi n lambda 0 sin left frac theta 2 right qquad 5 nbsp Since velocity V displaystyle V nbsp is proportional to the applied electric field E displaystyle E nbsp the apparent electrophoretic mobility m o b s displaystyle mu obs nbsp is define by the equation V m o b s E 6 displaystyle vec V mu obs vec E qquad 6 nbsp Finally the relation between the Doppler shift frequency and mobility is given for the case of the optical configuration of Fig 3 by the equation y D m o b s n E l 0 sin 8 7 displaystyle upsilon D mu obs frac nE lambda 0 sin theta qquad 7 nbsp where E displaystyle E nbsp is the strength of the electric field n displaystyle n nbsp the refractive index of the medium l 0 displaystyle lambda 0 nbsp the wavelength of the incident light in vacuum and 8 displaystyle theta nbsp the scattering angle The sign of v D displaystyle v D nbsp is a result of vector calculation and depends on the geometry of the optics The spectral frequency can be obtained according to Eq 2 When y M gt y D displaystyle upsilon M gt upsilon D nbsp Eq 2 is modified and expressed as y p y o y D y M 8 displaystyle upsilon p upsilon o pm upsilon D upsilon M qquad 8 nbsp The modulation frequency y M displaystyle upsilon M nbsp can be obtained as the damping frequency without an electric field applied The particle diameter is obtained by assuming that the particle is spherical This is called the hydrodynamic diameter d H displaystyle d H nbsp d H k B T 3 p h D 10 displaystyle d H frac k B T 3 pi eta D qquad 10 nbsp where k B displaystyle k B nbsp is Boltzmann coefficient T displaystyle T nbsp is the absolute temperature and h displaystyle eta nbsp the dynamic viscosity of the surrounding fluid Profile of Electro Osmotic Flow editFigure 4 shows two examples of heterodyne autocorrelation functions of scattered light from sodium polystyrene sulfate solution NaPSS MW 400 000 4 mg mL in 10 mM NaCl The oscillating correlation function shown by Fig 4a is a result of interference between the scattered light and the modulated reference light The beat of Fig 4b includes additionally the contribution from the frequency changes of light scattered by PSS molecules under an electrical field of 40 V cm Figure 5 shows heterodyne power spectra obtained by Fourier transform of the autocorrelation functions shown in Fig 4 Figure 6 shows plots of Doppler shift frequencies measured at various cell depth and electric field strengths where a sample is the NaPSS solution These parabolic curves are called profiles of electro osmotic flow and indicate that the velocity of the particles changed at different depth The surface potential of the cell wall produces electro osmotic flow Since the electrophoresis chamber is a closed system backward flow is produced at the center of the cell Then the observed mobility or velocity from Eq 7 is a result of the combination of osmotic flow and electrophoretic movement Electrophoretic mobility analysis has been studied by Mori and Okamoto 16 who have taken into account the effect of electro osmotic flow at the side wall The profile of velocity or mobility at the center of the cell is given approximately by Eq 11 for the case where k gt 5 U a z A U 0 z b 2 D U 0 z b 1 A U 0 U p 11 displaystyle U a z AU 0 z b 2 Delta U 0 z b 1 A U 0 U p qquad 11 nbsp where z displaystyle z nbsp cell depth U a z displaystyle U a z nbsp apparent electrophoretic velocity of particle at position z U p displaystyle U p nbsp true electrophoretic velocity of the particles z b displaystyle z b nbsp thickness of the cell U 0 displaystyle U 0 nbsp average velocity of osmotic flow at upper and lower cell wall D U 0 displaystyle Delta U 0 nbsp difference between velocities of osmotic flow at upper and lower cell wall A 1 2 3 0 420166 k 12 displaystyle A frac 1 2 3 0 420166 k qquad 12 nbsp k a b displaystyle k a b nbsp a ratio between two side lengths of the rectangular cross section The parabolic curve of frequency shift caused by electro osmotic flow shown in Fig 6 fits with Eq 11 with application of the least squares method Since the mobility is proportional to a frequency shift of the light scattered by a particle and the migrating velocity of a particle as indicated by Eq 7 all the velocity mobility and frequency shifts are expressed by parabolic equations Then the true electrophoretic mobility of a particle the electro osmotic mobility at the upper and lower cell walls ware obtained The frequency shift caused only by the electrophoresis of particles is equal to the apparent mobility at the stationary layer The velocity of the electrophoretic migration thus obtained is proportional to the electric field as shown in Fig 7 The frequency shift increases with increase of the scattering angle as shown in Fig 8 This result is in agreement with the theoretical Eq 7 nbsp Fig 4 a and b Correlation function with and without electric field Sample NaPSS solution MW 400 000 of 4 mg ml in 10 mM NaCl Electric field applied a 0 V cm b 40 V cm Scattering angle 7 0 degree temperature 25 0 3 nbsp Fig 5 Heterodyne power spectra obtained by FFT of the correlation functions nbsp Fig 6 Frequency shifts observed at various cell depths nbsp Fig 7 Electric field dependence of the velocity at the stationary layer nbsp Fig 8 Frequency shift as a function of scattering angle Applications editElectrophoretic Light Scattering ELS is primarily used for characterizing the surface charges of colloidal particles like macromolecules or synthetic polymers ex polystyrene 6 in liquid media in an electric field In addition to information about surface charges ELS can also measure the particle size of proteins 7 and determine the zeta potential distribution Biophysics edit ELS is useful for characterizing information about the surface of proteins Ware and Flygare 1971 demonstrated that electrophoretic techniques can be combined with laser beat spectroscopy in order to simultaneously determine the electrophoretic mobility and diffusion coefficient of bovine serum albumin 8 The width of a Doppler shifted spectrum of light that is scattered from a solution of macromolecules is proportional to the diffusion coefficient 9 The Doppler shift is proportional to the electrophoretic mobility of a macromolecule 10 From studies that have applied this method to poly L lysine ELS is believed to monitor fluctuation mobilities in the presence of solvents with varying salt concentrations 11 It has also been shown that electrophoretic mobility data can be converted to zeta potential values which enables the determination of the isoelectric point of proteins and the number of electrokinetic charges on the surface 12 Other biological macromolecules that can be analyzed with ELS include polysaccharides pKa values of chitosans can be calculated from the dependency of electrophoretic mobility values on pH and charge density 13 Like proteins the size and zeta potential of chitosans can be determined through ELS 14 ELS has also been applied to nucleic acids and viruses The technique can be extended to measure electrophoretic mobilities of large bacteria molecules at low ionic strengths 15 Nanoparticles edit ELS has been used to characterize the polydispersity nanodispersity and stability of single walled carbon nanotubes in an aqueous environment with surfactants citation needed The technique can be used in combination with dynamic light scattering to measure these properties of nanotubes in many different solvents References edit Ware B R Flygare W H 1972 Light scattering in mixtures of BSA BSA dimers and fibrinogen under the influence of electric fields Journal of Colloid and Interface Science Elsevier BV 39 3 670 675 doi 10 1016 0021 9797 72 90075 6 ISSN 0021 9797 Josefowicz J Hallett F R 1975 03 01 Homodyne Electrophoretic Light Scattering of Polystyrene Spheres by Laser Cross Beam Intensity Correlation Applied Optics The Optical Society 14 3 740 doi 10 1364 ao 14 000740 ISSN 0003 6935 K Oka W Otani K Kameyama M Kidai and T Takagi Appl Theor Electrophor 1 273 278 1990 Zetasizer Nano User Manual PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2015 09 08 Retrieved 29 September 2021 Bellman C Caspari A Moitzi C Babick F 2019 Dynamic and Electrophoretic Light Scattering Anton Paar GmbH ISBN 978 3 200 06702 8 Okubo Tsuneo Suda Mitsuhiro 1999 Absorption of Polyelectrolytes on Colloidal Surfaces as Studied by Electrophoretic and Dynamic Light Scattering Techniques Journal of Colloid and Interface Science Elsevier BV 213 2 565 571 doi 10 1006 jcis 1999 6171 ISSN 0021 9797 Boeve E R Cao L C De Bruijn W C Robertson W G Romijn J C Schroder F H 1994 Zeta Potential Distribution on Calcium Oxalate Crystal and Tamm Horsfall Protein Surface Analyzed with Doppler Electrophoretic Light Scattering Journal of Urology Ovid Technologies Wolters Kluwer Health 152 2 Part 1 531 536 doi 10 1016 s0022 5347 17 32788 x ISSN 0022 5347 Ware B R Flygare W H 1971 The simultaneous measurement of the electrophoretic mobility and diffusion coefficient in bovine serum albumin solutions by light scattering Chemical Physics Letters Elsevier BV 12 1 81 85 doi 10 1016 0009 2614 71 80621 8 ISSN 0009 2614 Cummins H Z Knable N Yeh Y 1964 02 10 Observation of Diffusion Broadening of Rayleigh Scattered Light Physical Review Letters American Physical Society APS 12 6 150 153 doi 10 1103 physrevlett 12 150 ISSN 0031 9007 W H Flygare The effect of an electric field on the Rayleigh scattered light from a solution of macromolecules Report No III ARPA Contract No DAHC 15 67 C 0062 to the Materials Research Laboratory University of Michigan Wilcoxon Jess P Schurr J Michael 1983 03 15 Electrophoretic light scattering studies of poly L lysine in the ordinary and extraordinary phase Effects of salt molecular weight and polyion concentration The Journal of Chemical Physics AIP Publishing 78 6 3354 3364 doi 10 1063 1 445211 ISSN 0021 9606 Jachimska Barbara Wasilewska Monika Adamczyk Zbigniew 2008 Characterization of Globular Protein Solutions by Dynamic Light Scattering Electrophoretic Mobility and Viscosity Measurements Langmuir American Chemical Society ACS 24 13 6866 6872 doi 10 1021 la800548p ISSN 0743 7463 Strand Sabina P Tommeraas Kristoffer Varum Kjell M Ostgaard Kjetill 2001 Electrophoretic Light Scattering Studies of Chitosans with Different Degrees ofN acetylation Biomacromolecules American Chemical Society ACS 2 4 1310 1314 doi 10 1021 bm015598x ISSN 1525 7797 Jiang Hu Lin Kim You Kyoung Arote Rohidas Nah Jae Woon Cho Myung Haing Choi Yun Jaie Akaike Toshihiro Cho Chong Su 2007 Chitosan graft polyethylenimine as a gene carrier Journal of Controlled Release Elsevier BV 117 2 273 280 doi 10 1016 j jconrel 2006 10 025 ISSN 0168 3659 Hartford S L Flygare W H 1975 Electrophoretic Light Scattering on Calf Thymus Deoxyribonucleic Acid and Tobacco Mosaic Virus Macromolecules American Chemical Society ACS 8 1 80 83 doi 10 1021 ma60043a019 ISSN 0024 9297 1 Surfactant Science Series Consulting Editor Martin J Schick Consultant New York Vol 76 Electrical Phenomena at Interfaces Second Edition Fundamentals Measurements and Applications Second Edition Revised and Expanded Ed by Hiroyuki Ohshima Kunio Furusawa 1998 K Oka and K Furusawa Chapter 8 Electrophresis p 152 223 Marcel Dekker Inc 7 B R Ware and D D Haas in Fast Method in Physical Biochemistry and Cell Biology R I Sha afi and S M Fernandez Eds Elsevier New York 1983 Chap 8 9 Ware B R 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