Supercritical CO2 and Subcritical H2O Analysis (SCHAN) Instrument: Automated Lipid Analysis for in-situ Planetary Life Detection

27 June 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The search for extraterrestrial extant or extinct life in our Solar System will require highly capable instrumentation and methods for detecting low concentrations of biosignatures. This paper introduces the Supercritical CO2 and Subcritical H2O Analysis (SCHAN) instrument, a portable and automated system that integrates supercritical fluid extraction (SFE), supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC), and subcritical water extraction coupled with liquid chromatography. The instrument is compact and weighs 6.3 kg, making it suitable for spaceflight missions to planetary bodies. Traditional techniques, such as gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (MS), face challenges with involatile and thermally labile analytes, necessitating derivatization. The SCHAN instrument, however, eliminates the need for derivatization and co-solvents by utilizing neat supercritical CO2 with water as an additive. This SFE-SFC-MS method gives efficient lipid biosignature separations with median detection limits of 10 pg/g (ppt) for fatty acids and 50 pg/g (ppt) for sterols. Several free fatty acids and cholesterol were among the detected peaks in biologically lean samples from the Atacama Desert, demonstrating the instrument's potential for in-situ life detection missions. The SCHAN instrument addresses the challenges of conventional systems, offering a compact, portable, and spaceflight-compatible tool for the analysis of organics for future astrobiology-focused missions.

Keywords

In-situ life detection
Mars
Biosignatures
Biomarkers
Lipids

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting Information
Description
Descriptions of the CO2-refill system and EOS-based flow rate determination; additional demonstrations, verification, and valida-tion. (PDF)
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