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1.
A new hexane-in-water microemulsion was investigated as buffer in microemulsion EKC (MEEKC). At difference with other microemulsions, the addition of cosurfactant was not necessary to stabilize the microemulsion. The proposed microemulsion was successfully used to achieve electrophoretic separation of seven antibiotics including nitroimidazoles, cephapirin and tetracyclines. Selectivity and separation efficiency achieved in MEEKC were compared with MEKC. MEEKC technique proved to be more efficient than MEKC for performing the separation of the analytes and the presence of microemulsions was found to be critical to achieve the separation of tetracyclines. The proposed microemulsion also points out that solvents with high volatility, such as hexane, can be stabilized and used as a microemulsion of SDS.  相似文献   

2.
Marsh A  Clark B  Broderick M  Power J  Donegan S  Altria K 《Electrophoresis》2004,25(23-24):3970-3980
Microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC) is an electrodriven separation technique. Separations are typically achieved using oil-in-water microemulsions, which are composed of nanometre-sized droplets of oil suspended in aqueous buffer. The oil droplets are coated in surfactant molecules and the system is stabilised by the addition of a short-chain alcohol cosurfactant. The novel use of water-in-oil microemulsions for MEEKC separations has also been investigated recently. This report summarises the different microemulsion types and compositions used to-date and their applications with a focus on recent papers (2002-2004). The effects of key operating variables (pH, surfactant, cosurfactant, oil phase, buffer, additives, temperature, organic modifier) and methodology techniques are described.  相似文献   

3.
Microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC) is an electrodriven separation technique. Separations are generally achieved using microemulsions consisting of surfactant-coated nanometer-sized oil droplets suspended in aqueous buffer. A cosurfactant such as a short-chain alcohol is generally used to stabilize the microemulsion. This review summarizes the various microemulsion types and compositions that have been used in MEEKC. The effects of key-operating variables such as surfactant type and concentration, cosurfactant type and concentration, buffer pH and type, oil type and concentration, use of organic solvent and cyclodextrin additions, and temperature are described. Specific examples of water-in-oil microemulsions and chirally selective separations are also covered.  相似文献   

4.
Recent applications of microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Huie CW 《Electrophoresis》2006,27(1):60-75
Compared to MEKC, the presence of a water-immiscible oil phase in the microemulsion droplets of microemulsion EKC (MEEKC) gives rise to some special properties, such as enhanced solubilization capacity and enlarged migration window, which could allow for the improved separation of various hydrophobic and hydrophilic compounds, with reduced sample pretreatment steps, unique selectivities and/or higher efficiencies. Typically, stable and optically clear oil-in-water microemulsions containing a surfactant (SDS), oil (octane or heptane), and cosurfactant (1-butanol) in phosphate buffer are employed as separation media in conventional MEEKC. However, in recent years, the applicability of reverse MEEKC (water-in-oil microemulsions) has also been demonstrated, such as for the enhanced separation of highly hydrophobic substances. Also, during the past few years, the development and application of MEEKC for the separation of chiral molecules has been expanded, based on the use of enantioselective microemulsions that contained a chiral surfactant or chiral alcohol. On the other hand, the application of MEEKC for the characterization of the lipophilicity of chemical substances remains an active and important area of research, such as the use of multiplex MEEKC for the high-throughput determination of partition coefficients (log P values) of pharmaceutical compounds. In this review, recent applications of MEEKC (covering the period from 2003 to 2005) are reported. Emphases are placed on the discussion of MEEKC in the separation of chiral molecules and highly hydrophobic substances, as well as in the determination of partition coefficients, followed by a survey of recent applications of MEEKC in the analysis of pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and health-care products, biological and environmental compounds, plant materials, and foods.  相似文献   

5.
Cao J  Qu H  Cheng Y 《Electrophoresis》2010,31(20):3492-3498
In this work, a new ionic liquid-in-water (IL/W) microemulsion without requiring toxic organic solvents was investigated as a pseudostationary phase (PSP) in CE. As observed during the IL/W microemulsion system, a fast and an efficient separation of eight phenolic acids was achieved using 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolivmhexa fluorophosphate (bmimPF(6)) as oil drops, Tween 20 as the surfactant, and borate as the BGE. The effects of oil phase, surfactant, buffer and pH on the separation were explored in detail to evaluate the novel PSP. In contrast, the detection efficiency of these same analytes was markedly decreased using oil-in-water (O/W) MEEKC. We have also validated the practicality of the IL/W microemulsion method by quantitative determination of acidic compounds in pharmaceutical injection. The results obtained indicated that an additional association between the IL cations and analytes tested seemed to play a prominent role in the separation mechanism exhibited by this novel PSP compared with the conventional O/W MEEKC.  相似文献   

6.
Hua Yang  Yao Ding  Ping Li 《Electrophoresis》2013,34(9-10):1273-1294
Microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC) is a CE separation technique, which utilizes buffered microemulsions as the separation media. In the past two decades, MEEKC has blossomed into a powerful separation technique for the analysis of a wide range of compounds. Pseudostationary phase composition is so critical to successful resolution in EKC, and several variables could be optimized including surfactant/co‐surfactant/oil type and concentration, buffer content, and pH value. Additionally, MEEKC coupled with online sample preconcentration approaches could significantly improve the detection sensitivity. This review comprehensively describes the development of MEEKC from the period 1991 to 2012. Areas covered include basic theory, microemulsion composition, improving resolution and enhancing sensitivity methods, detection techniques, and applications of MEEKC.  相似文献   

7.
Recent advances in the development and application of microemulsion EKC   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Microemulsion EKC (MEEKC) is an electrodriven separation technique. Separations are typically achieved using oil-in-water microemulsions, which are composed of nanometre-sized oil droplets suspended in an aqueous buffer. The droplets are stabilised by a surfactant and a cosurfactant. The novel use of water-in-oil microemulsions has also been investigated. This review summarises the advances in the development of MEEKC separations and also the different areas of application including determination of log P values, pharmaceutical applications, chiral analysis, natural products and bioanalytical separations and the use of new methods such as multiplexed MEEKC and high speed MEEKC. Recent applications (2004-2006) are tabulated for each area with microemulsion composition details.  相似文献   

8.
以大豆磷脂为主要的表面活性剂,制备适合毛细管电动色谱使用的不同构成比的微乳体系, 应用溶剂化参数模型研究了中性溶质在其中的定量结构保留关系.使用动态涂层毛细管, 以二甲基亚砜和十二烷基苯分别作为电渗流和微乳液滴迁移的标记物, 测定了26个具有不同结构小分子中性化合物在17种微乳电动色谱体系下的保留因子, 建立了线性溶剂化能量关系(LSER)方程.通过比较两体系的LSER方程系数比较体系相似性.结果表明, 本研究建立的磷脂微乳电动色谱体系在线性溶剂化特征上和其它构成的微乳电动色谱体系相似.对溶质保留贡献较大的是溶质体积和有效氢键碱度, 油相种类及浓度对溶质的保留选择性无明显影响.  相似文献   

9.
Cao Y  Ni X  Sheng J 《Journal of chromatography. A》2011,1218(18):2598-2603
Recently, 1-butanol modified MEKC was proven to be similar to MEEKC in separation performance. In the present work, typical microemulsion containing 0.8% n-octane/3.3% SDS/6.6% 1-butanol/20 mM borax buffer and corresponding swollen micelle without n-octane were used to compare their microdroplet structures including hydrodynamic radius, electrokinetic potential ζ and charge density at the hydrodynamic shear surface, as well as microenvironment polarity in the interior of the microdroplets. Three kinds of corticosteroids were separated with MEEKC and 1-butanol modified MEKC to assess their separation performances. The experiment results showed that both microstructure and separation performance in microemulsion and in swollen micelle systems were alike, no matter whether oil phase n-octane was present. The environment polarity in the core of swollen micelle was slightly higher than in the microemulsions, and both of them were higher than in n-octane medium. Furthermore, the influences of SDS and 1-butanol concentration on microstructures were measured in details. Increasing the amount of SDS, hydrodynamic radius decreased in microemulsion but increased in swollen micelle. On the contrary, ζ and shear surface charge density changed in the reverse trends. With increment of 1-butanol concentration, the hydrodynamic radius increased dramatically in microemulsions, whereas decreased slightly in swollen micelle. Even though using n-octane as oil core was not a key factor, microemulsions and swollen micelle as pseudostationary phase in EKC should not be exactly the same.  相似文献   

10.
Kahle KA  Foley JP 《Electrophoresis》2006,27(4):896-904
In this study, the combination of two chiral components in a microemulsion formulation for the separation of enantiomers via microemulsion EKC (MEEKC) was successfully accomplished. Previous publications of chiral microemulsions have utilized only one chiral entity; the surfactant, cosurfactant, or oil was chiral. This is the first study, to date, of the effects of using two chiral species in a single pseudostationary phase (PSP). The chiral surfactant dodecoxycarbonylvaline (DDCV) was used in conjunction with the chiral cosurfactant S-2-hexanol. Ethyl acetate was incorporated as the oil core of the microemulsion and the buffer was 50 mM phosphate at a pH of 7. Additionally, a microemulsion prepared with racemic 2-hexanol was used for comparison to a previous DDCV microemulsion and as a baseline for the newly formulated dual chiral microemulsion. The efficiencies, resolutions, and enantioselectivities for the S-2-hexanol, racemic 2-hexanol, and original 1-butanol DDCV microemulsions are compared. The hexanol-based PSPs provide improved efficiencies and resolutions. To evaluate the combination of each DDCV enantiomer (R and S) with S-2-hexanol, changes in Gibb's free energy were calculated. A synergistic effect was found when two chiral components were combined to form a microemulsion.  相似文献   

11.
We describe the novel use of water-in-oil (W/O) microemulsions to achieve unique separations in microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC). The choice and concentration of the buffer type, surfactant and co-surfactant were all examined and optimized. Separations of a range of neutral and acidic analytes was shown to be markedly different to that obtained by (oil-in-water) O/W MEEKC. Neutral solutes are separated by virtue of their solubility (log P) values in O/W MEEKC with the more water-insoluble solutes migrating last. This separation process does not occur in W/O, as neutral solutes are not separated in order of log P.  相似文献   

12.
微乳液毛细管电动色谱研究   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
傅小芸  吕建德  竺安 《化学学报》1997,55(5):503-507
本文研究了两组混合样的微乳液毛细管电动色谱(MEEKC)分离, 较系统地研究了微乳液的内相, 助表面活性剂及其浓度对电动分离的迁移时间、柱效及时间窗的影响, 并与胶束毛细管电动色谱(MEKC)分离进行了比较, 选用由80mmol/L正辛烷-120mmol/L十二烷基硫酸钠-900mmol/L正丁醇-10mmol/L硼砂组成的微乳液, 样品组分电动色谱迁移时间的RSD<0.8%, 峰面积RSD<3.0%.  相似文献   

13.
Tao Wen  Guoan Luo  Jian Wang  Bo Yao  Jun Zhu 《Talanta》2007,71(2):854-860
Microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC) and solvent modified micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC) were investigated with the goal of the rapid separation of complex heroin and amphetamine samples. The rapid simultaneous separation of 17 species of heroin, amphetamine and their basic impurities and adulterants was performed within about 10 min using MEEKC for the first time, whereas solvent modified MEKCs were unable to resolve all the components. The comparisons between MEEKC and solvent modified MEKC proved internal lipophilic organic phase in microemulsions played an important role in improving the separation performance with respect to efficiency. However, the role of internal lipophilic organic phase in MEEKC was disgusted at high concentrations of cosurfactant, and the separations of MEEKC and 1-butanol modified MEKC became similar at high concentrations of 1-butanol. The evaluation of reproducibility, linearity and detection limit of optimized MEEKC method provided good results for all the analytes investigated, thus allowing its application to real controlled drug preparation analysis.  相似文献   

14.
This study describes for the first time, the ability of a normal stacking mode (NSM) on-line concentration step coupled with water-in-oil (W/O) microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC), using six common penicillin antibiotics (oxacillin, penicillin V, penicillin G, nafcillin, ampicillin, and amoxicillin) as test analytes. Optimization of penicillin separation in the conventional W/O MEEKC system demonstrated that change in the type and concentration of the oil phase (1-butanol) and column temperature had a pronounced effect on the separation. With the subsequent development of the NSM coupled with W/O MEEKC, improved separation and detection sensitivities were observed when an organic solvent plug (1-propanol; 1.04 cm) was placed between the W/O microemulsion and the sample solutions. This could be attributed to the solution viscosity difference between the aqueous sample zone and the organic solvent plug causing the penicillin to be stacked in this 1-propanol plug. The optimal NSM W/O MEEKC provided about 12-fold increase in detection sensitivity compared with conventional sample injection (50 mbar, 3 s). Finally, this proposed method was successfully applied in the analyses of several food samples (porcine organs) spiked with penicillin.  相似文献   

15.
Recent applications of microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Hansen SH 《Electrophoresis》2003,24(22-23):3900-3907
Microemulsions are used in a similar way as micellar solutions are used for separations in capillary electrophoresis. Within the last approximately six years, a number of papers have appeared in the literature in which the separation characteristics of microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC) have been investigated. The total number of papers dealing with MEEKC is now close to 100. One of the major fields of application for MEEKC has been the characterization of the lipophilicity of chemical substances but the technique has also been applied for the analysis of substances within the fields of natural products, pharmaceuticals, vitamins, peptides, proteins, and nucleic acid bases as well as nucleosides. An overview of the applications is given together with the microemulsions used for each application.  相似文献   

16.
Microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC) is an electrodriven separation technique. Separations are achieved using microemulsions which are nanometre-sized oil droplets suspended in aqueous buffer. The surface tension between the oil and water components is reduced by covered the oil droplet with an anionic surfactant such as sodium dodecyl sulphate and a co-surfactant such as a short-chain alcohol. This review summarises the various microemulsion types and compositions that have been used in MEEKC. The effects of key operating variables such as pH and temperature are also described. The application areas of MEEKC are also described in some detail. MEEKC has been applied to a wide range of water-soluble and insoluble both charged and neutral compounds. Examples are described which include analysis of derivatised sugars, proteins, pesticides and a wide range of pharmaceuticals. At present there are only a limited number of publications describing the use of MEEKC but it is anticipated that this number will increase rapidly in the near future as more awareness of the separation possibilities that MEEKC presents increases.  相似文献   

17.
Nonaqueous enzymology has emerged as a major area of biotechnology research and development. Enzymes in organic solvents offer great potential for the biocatalysis of a wide range of chemical processes that cannot occur in water. One of the most commonly used methods for carrying out enzymatic conversions in organic solvents is enzymes solubilized in water-in-oil (w/o) microemulsions or water containing reverse micelles. In reverse micelles, enzyme molecules are solubilized in discrete hydrated micelles formed by surfactants within a continuous phase, i.e., nonpolar organic solvent. Under appropriate conditions, these solutions are homogeneous, thermodynamically stable, and optically transparent. However, there are very few examples of preparative-scale enzyme-catalyzed synthesis in water-in-oil microemulsion. One reason is that despite the advantages offered by microemulsion media, product isolation and enzyme reuse from such singlephase liquid medium is more complex than in competing methodologies in which the catalyst is present as a separate solid phase. Therefore, the approach simplifying product isolation, and enzyme reuse from microemulsion-based media, has been the use of a gelled microemulsion system, especially gelatin silica nanocomposite.  相似文献   

18.
In this study, microemulsions of the chiral surfactant polysodium N-undecenoyl-D-valinate (poly-D-SUV) was utilized for enantiomeric separation by investigating two approaches using polymeric chiral surfactant in microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC). In the first approach, poly-D-SUV was used as an emulsifier surfactant along with 1-butanol and n-heptane. Enantioseparation of anionic or partially anionic binaphthyl derivatives, anionic barbiturates, and cationic paveroline derivatives were achieved by varying the mass fraction of 1-butanol, n-heptane and poly-D-SUV. For anionic or partially anionic analytes, relatively lower mass fractions of n-heptane, and poly-D-SUV were found to give optimum chiral separations as compared to that for cationic solutes. In the second approach, the chiral microemulsion polymer was prepared by polymerizing mixtures of 3.50% (w/w) of sodium N-undecenoyl-D-valinate (D-SUV) and 0.82% (w/w) of n-heptane (core phase) at varying concentration of 1-butanol. After polymerization, the n-heptane and 1-butanol were removed to yield solvent free microemulsion polymers (MPs) which were then utilized for the separation of anionic binaphthyl derivatives and anionic barbiturates. When MPs of D-SUV were utilized for chiral separation, 1.00% (w/w) 1-butanol and 3.50% (w/w) 1-butanol was optimum for enantioseparation of (+/-)-BNP and (+/-)-BOH, respectively. On the other hand, for anionic (+/-)-barbiturates very low concentration of butanol (0.25%, w/w) provided optimum resolution. Compared with micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC), the use of micelle polymers or microemulsion polymers in MEEKC showed dramatic enhancement for resolution of (+/-)-BNP, while this enhancement was less dramatic for other binaphthyls [(+/-)-BOH, (+/-)-BNA] as well as for (+/-)-barbiturates and (+/-)-paveroline derivatives. However, higher separation efficiency of the enantiomers was always observed with MEEKC than in MEKC.  相似文献   

19.
Selectivity in microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC) is a most promising separation technique providing good selectivity and high separation efficiency of anionic, cationic as well as neutral solutes. In MEEKC lipophilic organic solvents dispersed as tiny droplets in an aqueous buffer by the use of surfactants provide a pseudo-stationary phase to which the solutes may have an affinity either to the surface or they may even partition into the droplets. When the droplets are charged, typically negatively, they will migrate opposite to the electroosmotic flow and hence separation of neutral solutes may take place. In the present paper focus has been set on how to change selectivity in MEEKC. Changes in the nature of surfactant as well as in pH have been shown to be powerful tools in changing the selectivity. The type of lipophilic organic phase is of less importance for the separation of fairly lipophilic solutes. Also changes in the temperature surrounding the capillary may alter the selectivity.  相似文献   

20.
Huang HY  Lien WC 《Electrophoresis》2005,26(16):3134-3140
In this study, a microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC) method was developed to analyze and detect 13 phenolic compounds (syringic acid, p-cumaric acid, vanillic acid, caffeic acid, gallic acid, 3,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid, 4-hydroxybenzoic acid, (+)-catechin, (-)-epigallocatechin, (-)-epicatechin gallate, (-)-epigallocatechin gallate, (-)-epicatechin, and (-)-gallocatechin), which are present in many plant-derived foods. The effects of cosurfactant, organic modifier, and oil were examined in order to optimize the separation of these phenolic compounds. The amounts of cosurfactant (cyclohexanol) and organic modifier (acetonitrile) were determined as the major influence on the separation selectivity, while the type of oil partially affected the separation resolution of the phenolic compounds. A highly efficient MEEKC separation method was achieved within 14 min by using a microemulsion solution of pH 2.0 containing 2.89% w/v SDS, 1.36% w/v heptane, 7.66% w/v cyclohexanol, and 2% w/v ACN. Furthermore, the present work could demonstrate that the nature of the oil phase has a significant influence on the separation selectivity of phenolic compounds.  相似文献   

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