The Linear Dynamic Range and Limits of Detection of Fluorescein using the Agilent Cary Eclipse Fluorescence Spectrophotometer
Technical notes | 2014 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Fluorescein is a benchmark fluorescent label valued for its visible‐region excitation and emission, minimizing background interference and photodegradation in biological sample analysis. Characterizing the linear dynamic range and detection limits of fluorescence spectrophotometers is essential for accurate, quantitative assays of trace analytes.
This study assesses the linear dynamic range and limit of detection (LOD) of fluorescein in 0.01 M NaOH using the Agilent Cary Eclipse Fluorescence Spectrophotometer. It demonstrates instrument performance over a five‐order concentration span and evaluates sensitivity down to sub‐picomolar levels.
Fluorescein solutions from 0.1 pM to 1.06 µM were prepared in 0.01 M sodium hydroxide. Measurements employed the following parameters:
Absorption and emission spectra confirmed maxima at 480 nm and 520 nm, respectively. Calibration over five orders of magnitude (10 pM–1.06 µM) yielded excellent linearity (r2 = 0.99993). Five instruments produced an average LOD of 0.48 pM; regression‐based calculation across the linear range gave 0.45 pM, corroborating high sensitivity.
The combination of a broad dynamic range and sub‐picomolar detection capability makes the Cary Eclipse spectrophotometer ideally suited for quantitative fluorescence assays in biological research, environmental monitoring, and QA/QC workflows where trace analyte determination is critical.
The Agilent Cary Eclipse Fluorescence Spectrophotometer delivers a linear dynamic range spanning five orders of magnitude for fluorescein and achieves detection limits below 0.5 pM. These attributes support reliable, quantitative fluorescence measurements in demanding analytical applications.
Fluorescence spectroscopy
IndustriesManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Importance of the topic
Fluorescein is a benchmark fluorescent label valued for its visible‐region excitation and emission, minimizing background interference and photodegradation in biological sample analysis. Characterizing the linear dynamic range and detection limits of fluorescence spectrophotometers is essential for accurate, quantitative assays of trace analytes.
Study objectives and overview
This study assesses the linear dynamic range and limit of detection (LOD) of fluorescein in 0.01 M NaOH using the Agilent Cary Eclipse Fluorescence Spectrophotometer. It demonstrates instrument performance over a five‐order concentration span and evaluates sensitivity down to sub‐picomolar levels.
Methodology and instrumentation
Fluorescein solutions from 0.1 pM to 1.06 µM were prepared in 0.01 M sodium hydroxide. Measurements employed the following parameters:
- Excitation wavelength: 480 nm
- Emission wavelength: 520 nm
- Excitation/emission slit widths: 10 nm
- Signal averaging time: 1 s
- PMT detector voltage: adjusted between measurements to maintain linear response
- Total acquisition time: 60 s
Results and discussion
Absorption and emission spectra confirmed maxima at 480 nm and 520 nm, respectively. Calibration over five orders of magnitude (10 pM–1.06 µM) yielded excellent linearity (r2 = 0.99993). Five instruments produced an average LOD of 0.48 pM; regression‐based calculation across the linear range gave 0.45 pM, corroborating high sensitivity.
Benefits and practical applications
The combination of a broad dynamic range and sub‐picomolar detection capability makes the Cary Eclipse spectrophotometer ideally suited for quantitative fluorescence assays in biological research, environmental monitoring, and QA/QC workflows where trace analyte determination is critical.
Future trends and applications
- Extension to other fluorophores and wavelength regions
- Integration with microvolume and multiwell formats for high‐throughput screening
- Enhanced detector technologies for further sensitivity gains
- Coupling with automated sample handling and data analysis pipelines
Conclusion
The Agilent Cary Eclipse Fluorescence Spectrophotometer delivers a linear dynamic range spanning five orders of magnitude for fluorescein and achieves detection limits below 0.5 pM. These attributes support reliable, quantitative fluorescence measurements in demanding analytical applications.
Reference
- ASTM E578-07: Standard Test Method for Linearity of Fluorescence Measuring Systems
- ASTM E579-04: Standard Test Method for Limit of Detection of Fluorescence of Quinine Sulphate
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