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Droplet microfluidics with push-pull and microdialysis sampling from brain slices, cultured cells and engineered tissues produce low volume mass limited samples containing analytes sampled from the extracellular space. This sampling approach coupled to mass spectrometry (MS) detection allows evaluation of time-dependent chemical changes. Our goal is an approach for continuous sampling and segregation of extracellular samples into picoliter droplets followed by the characterization of the droplets using nanoelectrospray ionization (nESI) MS. The main focus here is the optimization of the carrier oil for the microfluidic device that neither affects the stability of picoliter droplets nor compatibility with MS detection of a range of analytes.
Zhao et al. (Sun,) studied this question.