https://www.selleckchem.com/products/BKM-120.html In parallel, spectra were also used to build an end-point detection model based on principal component analysis (PCA) for multivariate statistical process control (MSPC). The novel MEMS-FPI sensor combined with robust chemometric analysis proved to be a suitable and affordable alternative for online process monitoring, contributing to sustainability in the process industry.Miniaturization is one of the main requirements in the design of portable devices that allow in-field analysis. This is especially interesting in environmental monitoring, where the time of the sample-to-result process could be decreased considerably by approaching the analytical platforms to the sampling point. We employed traditional mass-produced and low-cost elements (micropipette tips and pins) in an out-of-box application to generate an innovative and cost-effective platform for analytical purposes. We have designed simple and easy-to-use electrochemical cells inside polypropylene micropipette tips with three stainless-steel pins acting as the working, reference and counter electrodes of a potentiostatic system. The pin acting as working electrode was previously coated with carbon ink, meanwhile the rest were used unmodified. In this way, electrochemical in-the-tip measurements were done directly using low volumes (μL) of sample. The devices showed good reproducibility, with a relative standard deviation of 7% (n = 5) for five different tip-based complete electrochemical cells. As a proof-of-concept, its utility has been probed by the determination of an anionic surfactant (sodium dodecyl sulphate, SDS) in water through its interaction with methylene blue (MB). Two different alternatives were presented based on the 1) increase in the current intensity of the cathodic peak of MB due to the presence of SDS; 2) electrochemical determination of the MB remaining in the aqueous phase after extraction of the pair SDS-MB to an organic medium.The outb