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Factors Influencing retention in Ion Exchange. Ionic strength: not real important in selectivitypH: anion exchange pH % retention % cation exchange pH % retention
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1. Types of Liquid Chromatography I. Ion Exchange Chromatography
A. Factors influencing retention
B. Suppressed ion exchange
II. Partitioning Chromatography
A. Normal phase/ reverse phase
III. Size Exclusion Chromatography
IV. Supercritical Fluid Chromatography/ SFE
V. Capillary Electrophoresis
2. Factors Influencing retention in Ion Exchange Ionic strength: not real important in selectivity
pH: anion exchange pH % retention % cation exchange pH % retention &
Temperature: T % efficiency %
Flow rate: Slightly slower than other HPLC methods to maximize resolution & improve mass transfer kinetics
Buffer salt: Influences pH & selectivity
Organic Modifier: Solvent strength increases with increases in modifier
3. Suppressed Ion Chromatography
4. Partitioning Chromatography Analyte interacts with mobile and stationary phase, differential interaction leads to selectivity
Interactions that are important
Proton accepting ability * most important
Dipole interaction
Proton Donor * most important
e- pair donating ability
Van der Waals dispersion forces
5. Types of Partitioning Chromatography Normal Phase
Stationary phase: Polar with short carbon chains
Mobile phase: Non-polar such as hexane
Polar things are retained on column
Applications: oil soluble vitamins, nitrophenols
6. Types of Partitioning Chromatography REVERSE PHASE
More common
Stationary Phase: Hydrophobic C18 or C8
Mobile Phase:
Polar usually aqueous
Polar substance elute first
7. Solvophobic Theory Water has a lot of intermolecular interactions in the liquid phase
Solute dissolved in water disrupts those intermolecular interactions
Solute is forced out of aqueous phase not because of favorable interactions between analyte and stationary phase but because of unfavorable interactions between solute and water when solute is dissolved in aqueous phase hence: SOLVOPHOBIC THEORY
Polar functional groups such as OH would increase the favorability of interaction and thus decrease retention (in mobile phase longer)
Polar things elute non-polar things elute
9. Size Exclusion Chromatography Molecules partition into bead
Large molecules cant get in and are unretained, small molecules get in and never get out, medium size will differentiate
Need at least 10% difference in MW to differentiate
GPC ? organics
Gel filtration chromatography ? aqueous
10. Size Exclusion Chromatography Advantages
1) Short, well defined retention times
2) Narrow bands ? high sensitivity
3) No sample loss b/c no interaction with stat. phase
4) No column destruction b/c no interaction with stat. phase
11. Size Exclusion Chromatography Disadvantages
Only limited # of peaks can be separated b/c time scale of separation is short
Not good for separating compounds of similar size
12. Summary Phase/ Mode % Use
Reverse phase 50.6
Normal phase 24.1
Ion Exchange 14.1
Size Exclusion 6.6
Chiral 3.5
Hydrophobic 1.1
13. Supercritical Fluids
15. Supercritical Fluid Chromatography Instrumentation
16. Properties of Mobile Phases Used in Chromatography
18. Supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) Used instead of soxhlet extraction
Advantages
Fast: rate of diffusion between sample matrix & extraction fluid 10-60 min vs. days
Solvent strength can be varied by changes in P & T 3. Less Harmful solvent
4. Many SCF are gases at RT, recovery of analytes is easy
5. Many SCF are cheap, inert, and non-toxic
6. On-line extraction
19. Supercritical fluid extraction Disadvantages
Method development is more complex
Limited # of mobile phases
Capital equipment & CO2 expensive
Requires more operator time to do 1 at time
20. Insert Hawthorne paper