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1.
Raman spectroscopy is used to examine the effect of mobile phase composition on the orientation of octadecyl-bonded silica-based reversed-phase liquid chromatographic (RPLC) stationary phase ligands. The effect of ligand bonding density is also investigated. The present experimental set-up utilizes a direct, noninvasive, on-column approach to examine the solvent dependent conformational behavior of the bonded ligands under flow-rate and back pressure conditions similar to those used during conventional RPLC measurements. Neat, single-component, mobile phase solvents including water, acetonitrile, methanol and chloroform are used to investigate the hypothesized collapsing and extension of stationary phase ligands with changes in mobile phase composition. No evidence of phase collapse was observed upon changing the mobile phase composition from an organic to an aqueous content. Also, Raman spectroscopic measurements allowed the differentiation between associated and free acetonitrile solvent.  相似文献   

2.
Polyphenolic acids are a complex group of compounds that have attracted enormous attention in the last few years because of their biological properties. In this work, the proportion of organic modifier and the pH of acetonitrile-water mixtures used as mobile phases were optimized in order to separate a series of polyphenolic compounds. The linear solvation energy relationship formalism based on the single solvent polarity parameter, E(T)N was used to predict their chromatographic behavior as a function of the percentage of acetonitrile in the eluent. Moreover, the correlation established between retention and the pH of the aqueous-organic mobile phase was used to optimize the pH of the mobile phase. The optimized mobile phase is composed of acetonitrile and formic acid buffer adjusted to pH 4.25, with 12% (v/v) acetonitrile. Also, the pKa values of polyphenolic acids in acetonitrile-water mixtures were determined using chromatographic data, and in order to validate the optimized conditions, a series of polyphenolic compounds was studied in strawberries.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The solvation parameter model is used to characterize the retention properties of a cyanopropylsiloxanebonded, silica-based sorbent with methanol, acetonitrile, tetrahydrofuran, and isopropanol in water as mobile phases. The system constants over the composition range 1 to 50 % (v/v) organic solvent indicate that retention occurs because of the relative ease of cavity formation in the solvated stationary phase compared to the same process in the predominantly aqueous mobile phase as well as from more favorable stationary phase interactions with solutes containing π- and n-electrons. The capacity of the solute for dipole-type interactions is not important whereas all hydrogen-bond-type interactions result in reduced retention. Graphing the system constants as a function of mobile phase composition provides a simple mechanism for interpreting the change in capacity of the chromatographic system for retention in terms of changes in the relative weighting of fundamental intermolecular interactions. A comparison is also made with the retention properties of an octadecylsiloxane-bonded, silica-based sorbent with 30 % (v/v) methanol in water as the mobile phase and the extraction characteristics of a porous polymer sorbent with 1 % (v/v) methanol, acetonitrile, tetrahydrofuran, and isopropanol in water as the sample processing solvent. Changes in sorbent selectivity due to selective uptake of the processing solvent are much smaller for the cyanopropylsiloxane-bonded sorbent than the results found for a porous polymer sorbent.  相似文献   

4.
Temperature affects not only the chromatographic characteristics of solute but may also alter the conformation of the stationary phase. However, temperature influences on enantioseparation of solute and conformation of chiral stationary phase (CSP) are seldom considered simultaneously. In this study, three temperature programs, a conventional heating procedure, a cyclic van't Hoff program, and a step-temperature program, were employed to evaluate temperature effects on enantioseparation of five imidazolinone herbicides on Chiralcel OJ column and the conformational state of the stationary phase. The van't Hoff plots of retention factor (k'), distribution constant (K) and separation factor (alpha) for imazapyr (1), imazapic (2), imazethapyr (3), and imazamox (4) were linear within 15-50 degrees C. Nonlinear van't Hoff plots of alpha were observed for imazaquin (5) with mobile phase of n-hexane (0.1% TFA)-2-propanol at 70/30 or 60/40 (v/v). The large molecular size of imazaquin (5) and van't Hoff plots of alpha were therefore more sensitive at detecting conformational changes of the stationary phase. Small but irreversible conformational changes occurred at 5-10 degrees C with the solvent ratio of 60/40. During the cyclic van't Hoff program, reversible conformational changes were observed at >or=15 degrees C. A switch was even visible at about 25 degrees C with the solvent ratio of 60/40 during the re-cooling cycle. The cyclic van't Hoff temperature program showed that using OJ column may yield satisfactory results at 15-50 degrees C but not at 相似文献   

5.
The behavior of protonated binary solvents injected into deuterated binary mobile phases in capillary LC is studied with NMR. Specifically, the solvent elution is followed on-flow with a capillary LC coupled to a 900 nL volume microcoil NMR probe. A range of identical composition 5% protonated (and 95% deuterated) solvents is injected into composition-matched deuterated mobile phases of CD(3)CN/D(2)O and CD(3)OD/D(2)O. The protonated components separate for all solvent combinations except at 80% CD(3)CN/20% D(2)O and similar to 72% CD(3)OD/28% D(2)O where only a single retention time is observed. The more hydrophilic protonated component, HOD, elutes first with higher percentages of hydrophilic solvent, D(2)O, in the mobile phase whereas retention is reversed with the higher percentage of the more hydrophobic solvent (CD(3)CN and CD(3)OD) in the mobile phase. The hydrophilic/hydrophobic nature of the chromatographic system as a function of mobile phase composition is characterized by following the retention times of protonated solvents.  相似文献   

6.
A review about the influence of mobile phase acid-base equilibria on the liquid chromatography retention of protolytic analytes with acid-base properties is presented. The general equations that relate retention to mobile phase pH are derived and the different procedures to measure the pH of the mobile phase are explained. These procedures lead to different pH scales and the relationships between these scales are presented. IUPAC rules for nomenclature of the different pH are also presented. Proposed literature buffers for pH standardization in chromatographic mobile phases are reviewed too. Since relationships between analyte retention and mobile phase pH depends also on the pKa value of the analyte, the solute pKa data in water-organic solvent mixtures more commonly used as chromatographic mobile phase are also reviewed. The solvent properties that produce variation of the pKa values with solvent composition are discussed. Chromatographic examples of the results obtained with the different procedures for pH measurement are presented too. Application to the determination of aqueous pKa values from chromatographic retention data is also critically discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The solvation parameter model is used to characterize the retention properties of a cyanopropylsiloxane-bonded, silica-based sorbent with methanol, acetonitrile, tetrahydrofuran, and isopropanol in water as mobile phases. The system constants over the composition range 1 to 50% (v/v) organic solvent indicate that retention occurs because of the relative ease of cavity formation in the solvated stationary phase compared to the same process in the predominantly aqueous mobile phase as well as from more favorable stationary phase interactions with solutes containing - and n-electrons. The capacity of the solute for dipole-type interactions is not important whereas all hydrogen-bond-type interactions result in reduced retention. Graphing the system constants as a function of mobile phase composition provides a simple mechanism for interpreting the change in capacity of the chromatographic system for retention in terms of changes in the relative weighting of fundamental intermolecular interactions. A comparison is also made with the retention properties of an octadecylsiloxane-bonded, silica-based sorbent with 30% (v/v) methanol in water as the mobile phase and the extraction characteristics of a porous polymer sorbent with 1% (v/v) methanol, acetonitrile, tetrahydrofuran, and isopropanol in water as the sample processing solvent. Changes in sorbent selectivity due to selective uptake of the processing solvent are much smaller for the cyanopropylsiloxane-bonded sorbent than the results found for a porous polymer sorbent.  相似文献   

8.
Porous graphitic carbon (PGC) is known as well suited adsorbent for liquid chromatography of carbohydrates. In this work we report on systematic investigations of solvent effects on the retention mechanism of fluorescence labeled malto-oligosaccharides on PGC. The adsorption mechanism was found to depend on the type of organic modifier used in the mobile phase. Positive adsorption enthalpies and entropies, which have already been reported in the literature, were solely produced using acetonitrile. Both alternative solvents (tetrahydrofuran, 2-propanol) yielded in contrast negative enthalpies. As plausible retention mechanism for oligosaccharides on PGC applying acetonitrile as mobile phase component we propose the formation of a dense and highly ordered solvation layer of the PGC surface with the linear acetonitrile molecules. Adsorption of analyte molecules requires a displacement of numerous acetonitrile molecules, which explains the positive enthalpy and entropy values measured. The interplay of enthalpic and entropic contributions to the overall adsorption phenomena results in strongly temperature dependent chromatographic selectivity values.  相似文献   

9.
The retention mechanism and chromatographic behavior for different polar analytes under hydrophilic interaction chromatography (HILIC) conditions have been studied by application of different mobile phases and stationary phases to various analytes at different temperatures. In addition to the commonly accepted mechanism of analyte liquid-liquid partitioning between mobile phase and water-enriched solvent layer which is partially immobilized onto the surface of the stationary phase, hydrogen-bonding, hydrophobic interaction, and ion-exchange interactions may also be involved. The predominant retention mechanism in HILIC separation is not always easily predictable. It can depend not only on the characteristics of the analytes but also on the selection of mobile and stationary phase compositions. The objective of this review is to evaluate the potential application of column temperature and mobile phase composition toward improving HILIC selectivity. The functional groups from analyte structures, stationary phase materials and organic mobile phase solvents will be highlighted.  相似文献   

10.
It is demonstrated in this report that a conventional strong-acid cation-exchange column can exhibit reversed-phase chromatographic behavior simultaneously with ion-exchange. Adjusting the pH to control cation retention has no effect on the retention of neutral organic analytes. Likewise, changes in the methanol content of the mobile phase to adjust organic analyte retention causes only a small decrease in retention of metal ions in the 0 to 10% (v/v) methanol range, and no significant effect beyond that. Linear calibration behavior of both metal cations and neutral organic analytes is found on this column over three-order of magnitude. Examples of simultaneous metal cation-neutral organic separations in both the isocratic and gradient modes are shown, with conductivity detection for the metal ions and UV for the organic analytes. An isocratic separation of metal ions and neutrals in a vitamin pill is also demonstrated.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of solvent system, partition coefficient, retention of stationary phase, column, revolution speed, and flow rate of mobile phase are well known parameters to effect HSCCC (high-speed counter-current chromatography) separations. Temperature effects on chromatographic techniques like HPLC and GC are well studied, but the influence of temperature on CCC solvent systems is hardly investigated. This paper presents the influence of temperature on several key parameters (partition coefficient, settling time, volume ratios) in the hydrophobic HSCCC solvent system hexane:dichloromethane:acetonitrile (30:11:18, v/v/v) used for the isolation of lycopene from tomato paste at 10, 15, 20 and 25 degrees C.  相似文献   

12.
The organic solvent content and the pH in the mobile phase are the usual main factors in reversed-phase liquid chromatographic separations, owing to their strong effects on retention and/or selectivity. Temperature is often neglected. However, even in cases where the impact of this factor on selectivity is minor, the reduction in analysis time is still an interesting reason to consider it. In addition, ionisable compounds may exhibit selectivity changes, owing to the interaction of organic solvent and/or temperature with pH. The separation of ionisable compounds (nine diuretics: bendroflumethiazide, benzthiazide, bumetanide, chlorthalidone, furosemide, piretanide, probenecid, trichloromethiazide and xipamide, and two beta-blockers: oxprenolol and propranolol) exhibiting different acid-base behaviour was studied. The compounds were tested in a Zorbax SB C18 column under a wide range of conditions: 25-45% (v/v) acetonitrile, pH 3-7 and 20-50 degrees C. Models considering two factors (organic solvent/pH and temperature/pH), and three factors (organic solvent/temperature/pH) were developed from a previously reported equation, which considers the polarity contributions of solute, stationary and mobile phases. This allowed a comprehensive method to predict the retention of the 11 compounds, the modification of their acid-base behaviour (i.e. determination of protonation constants and shifts of the retention versus pH curves), and the selectivity changes within the studied factor ranges.  相似文献   

13.
Small organic acids have shown significant retention on various stationary phases, such as amide, amino, aspartamide, silica and sulfobetaine phase commonly used in hydrophilic interaction chromatography (HILIC). This study investigated the effect of chromatographic conditions on the retention behavior of organic acids in HILIC using the tool of design of experiment (DOE). The results of the DOE study indicated that both the content of organic solvent (i.e., acetonitrile) and salt concentration in the mobile phase had significant effects on the retention of organic acids. Higher content of organic solvent in the mobile phase led to a significant increase in retention on all types of stationary phases. Increasing salt concentration also resulted in a moderate increase in retention; however, the effect of salt concentration varied with the type of stationary phase. The study also revealed that column temperature had less impact on retention than organic solvent content and salt concentration in HILIC.  相似文献   

14.
Plots of the retention factor against mobile phase composition were used to organize a varied group of solutes into three categories according to their retention mechanism on an octadecylsiloxane-bonded silica stationary phase HyPURITY C18 with methanol-water and acetonitrile-water mobile phase compositions containing 10-70% (v/v) organic solvent. The solutes in category 1 could be fit to a general retention model, Eq. (2), and exhibited normal retention behavior for the full composition range. The solutes in category 2 exhibited normal retention behavior at high organic solvent composition with a discontinuity at low organic solvent compositions. The solutes in category 3 exhibited a pronounced step or plateau in the middle region of the retention plots with a retention mechanism similar to category 1 solutes at mobile phase compositions after the discontinuity and a different retention mechanism before the discontinuity. Selecting solutes and appropriate composition ranges from the three categories where a single retention mechanism was operative allowed modeling of the experimental retention factors using the solvation parameter model. These models were then used to predict retention factors for solutes not included in the models. The overwhelming number of residual values [log k (experimental) - log k (model predicted)] were negative and could be explained by contributions from steric repulsion, defined as the inability of the solute to insert itself fully into the stationary phase because of its bulkiness (i.e., volume and/or shape). Steric repulsion is shown to strongly depend on the mobile phase composition and was more significant for mobile phases with a low volume fraction of organic solvent in general and for mobile phases containing methanol rather than acetonitrile. For mobile phases containing less than about 20 % (v/v) organic solvent the mobile phase was unable to completely wet the stationary phase resulting in a significant change in the phase ratio and for acetonitrile (but less so methanol) changes in the solvation environment indicated by a discontinuity in the system maps.  相似文献   

15.
A simple systematic approach is presented for optimizing high-performance liquid chromatographic separations of anabolics with multi-component isocratic mobile phases. A computer program was obtained and adjusted for use with an IBM-compatible XT personal computer. The program requires experimental retention data with three quaternary solvent mixtures to calculate the optimum solvent composition using a geometric model of a prism. For each possible composition of the mobile phase the set of retention data can be calculated. Applications are shown for mixtures of anabolic compounds using a mobile phase composed of methanol, tetrahydrofuran and acetonitrile. The predicted retention data agreed very well with the experimental data.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of the mobile phase on retention is studied in this paper for a group of over 70 compounds with a broad range of multiple functional groups. We varied the pH of the mobile phase (pH 3, 7, and 10) and the organic modifier (methanol, acetonitrile (ACN), and tetrahydrofuran (THF)), using 15 different stationary phases. In this paper, we describe the overall retention and selectivity changes observed with these variables. We focus on the primary effects of solvent choice and pH. For example, transfer rules for solvent composition resulting in equivalent retention depend on the packing as well as on the type of analyte. Based on the retention patterns, one can calculate selectivity difference values for different variables. The selectivity difference is a measure of the importance of the different variables involved in method development. Selectivity changes specific to the type of analyte are described. The largest selectivity differences are obtained with pH changes.  相似文献   

17.
The aim of this work was to develop a model that accurately describes retention in liquid chromatography (LC) as a function of pH and solvent composition throughout a large parameter space. The variation of retention as a function of the solvent composition, keeping other factors constants, has been extensively studied. The linear relationship established between retention factors of solutes and the polarity parameter of the mobile phase, E(N)T, has proved to predict accurately retention in LC as a function of the organic solvent content. Moreover, correlation between retention and the mobile phase pH, measured in the hydroorganic mixture, can be established allowing prediction of the chromatographic behavior as a function of the eluent pH. The combination of these relationships could be useful for modelling retention in LC as a function of solvent composition and pH. For that purpose, the retention behavior on an octadecyl silica column of a group of diuretic compounds covering a wide range of physico-chemical properties were studied using acetonitrile as organic modifier. The suggested model accurately describes retention of ionizable solutes as concomitant effects of variables included and is applicable to all solutes studied. We also aimed to establish an experimental design that allows to reproduce to a good approximation the real retention surface from a limited number of experiments, that is from a limited number of chromatograms. Ultimately, our intention is to use the model and experimental design for the simultaneous interpretive optimization of pH and proportion of organic solvent of the mobile phase to be used in the proposed separation.  相似文献   

18.
19.
In this study, the retention behavior of selected hydrophobic and polar bases on a minimally modified silica hydride phase was investigated. From these results and the associated retention plots, significant differences in the chromatographic dependencies of these two classes of basic compounds were evident. The polar bases exhibited strong retention with mobile phases of high organic solvent content, but displayed weak retention with mobile phases of high water content. In contrast, the hydrophobic bases showed “U‐shape” retention dependencies, indicative of the interplay of both RP and normal‐phase retention characteristics. These studies have demonstrated that hydrophobic and polar bases can be simultaneously separated on the same column either under typical RP‐like or aqueous normal‐phase‐like conditions, respectively, with distinctive selectivity. Finally, the effects of temperature on the RP and aqueous normal phase modality of separations with these analytes were investigated, where discrete changes in retention behavior were also observed.  相似文献   

20.
Theoretical aspects of temperature in liquid chromatography (LC) have mostly been studied to elucidate changes in retention behavior of small and large molecules in various solvents. That temperature also plays a significant role in chromatographic performance is less known. Kinetic plots are an established tool to predict chromatographic performance in terms of speed and efficiency that can be obtained with a certain particle size at the maximum attainable column pressure. In this paper, temperature effects on mobile phase viscosity and analyte diffusion are incorporated in these plots to prove that superior performances are within experimental reach for conventional LC columns and equipment. Verification of the modified kinetic plots with experimental data points is presented.  相似文献   

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