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INSTRUMENTAL ANALYSIS CHEM 4811. CHAPTER 13. DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state university. CHAPTER 13 LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY (LC). LC STATIONARY PHASE. - Usually silica (SiO 2 · xH 2 O ) - Alumina (Al 2 O 3 · xH 2 O)
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INSTRUMENTAL ANALYSIS CHEM 4811 CHAPTER 13 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state university
CHAPTER 13 LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY (LC)
LC STATIONARY PHASE - Usually silica (SiO2· xH2O) - Alumina (Al2O3 · xH2O) - Adsorption of water slowly deactivates adsorption sites of silica - May be reactivated by heating to about 200oC in an oven
ELUENT STRENGTH (εo) - A measure of adsorption energy of solvent - εo of pentane is 0 - More polar solvents have greater eluent strengths - Solutes elute more rapidly when eluent strength is greater
ELUENT STRENGTH (εo) - Weakly retained solutes are first eluted with a low eluent strength solvent - Eluent strength is increased by adding a polar solvent to elute strongly retained solutes - Eluent strength is increased by making mobile phase more like the stationary phase Increasing order of polarity contribution HCs < ethers < esters < ketones < aldehydes < amides < amines < alcohols
HIGH PERFORMANCE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY (HPLC) - Good for Proteomics (analysis of amino acids and peptides) - Uses closed packed columns under high pressure - Resolution increases with decreasing particle size of stationary phase - Decreasing particle size decreases plate height - Small particle size reduces the terms A and C in the van Deemter equation
HPLC STATIONARY PHASE - Microporous spherical particles of silica (2 – 10 µm) - Long chain C18 hydrocarbon bonded to silica surface (Octadecyl) - Particles must be stable, uniform, spherical for uniform flow - The area covered by stationary phase is greater than that of the polymer film in GC - Column operates at very high pressures (500 – 6000 psi)
HPLC STATIONARY PHASE - The organosilyl bonds may hydrolyze at very low pH - Silica may dissolve at high pH (above 8) - Silica can become soluble at very high temperatures - Zirconia (ZrO2) is used as particle support which has greater pH range stability (1 – 14) and temperature stability (> 100 oC) - Cross-linked styrene-divinylbenzene copolymer (called XAD resins) are also used
NORMAL PHASE HPLC - Stationary phase is polar - Mobile phase is less polar - Eluent strength is increased by adding a more polar solvent Examples of organic substituents for stationary phase Amino [–(CH2)3NH2] Cyano [–(CH2)3–C≡N] Diol [–(CH2)2OCH2CH(OH)CH2OH]
REVERSE PHASE HPLC (RP-HPLC) - More common - Stationary phase is weakly polar or nonpolar - Mobile is more aqueous or polar - Insensitive to polar impurities and eliminates tailing Examples of organic substituents for stationary phase Octadecyl [–(CH2)17CH3; C18,ODS] Octyl [–(CH2)7CH3; C8] Phenyl [–(CH2)3C6H5]
HPLC INSTRUMENTATION - Mobile Phase Degassing (reservoirs with He gas for removal of dissolved gases) - Mobile Phase Storage (reservoirs for storing mobile phase) - Mobile Phase Mixing (for mixing solvents from reservoirs) - HPLC Pump (generates high pressure for high performance)
HPLC INSTRUMENTATION - Fill/Drain Valve (liquid transfer lines and components) - Rotary Sample Loop Injector (introduces sample with syringe) - The Column - Irreversible adsorption to the columns is very common - Disposable guard column containing the same stationary phase is attached to the column entrance - HPLC Detectors
HPLC INSTRUMENTATION Isocratic Elution - Elution with a single solvent - Elution with a constant solvent mixture Gradient Elution - Solvent is changed continuously from weak to strong eluent strength - Used when the solvent does not efficiently elute all components
HPLC DETECTORS Refractive Index (RI) Detector - Universal, nondestructive, concentration detector - Relatively insensitive and for only isocratic separations Evaporative Light Scattering Detector (ELSD) - Universal, destructive, mass-flow detector - Sensitive and for isocratic or gradient separations UV-VIS Absorption Detectors (most common) - Nondestructive, concentration detector - Varying sensitivity and for isocratic or gradient separations
HPLC DETECTORS • Fluorescence Detector • - Compound specific, nondestructive, concentration detector • - Varying sensitivity and for isocratic or gradient separations • Electrochemical Detectors (ECD) • - Compound specific, destructive, concentration or mass-flow • - Varying sensitivity and for isocratic RP-HPLC • Conductometric Detector • For cations and anions in solution, nondestructive, concentration • For isocratic RP-HPLC and ion chromatography • Charged Aerosol Detector (most sensitive)
HPLC HYPHENATED TECHNIQUES HPLC-UV-VIS LC-NMR HPLC-MS (THERMOSPRAY INTERFACE) HPLC-MS (ELECTROSPRAY INTERFACE) HPLC-MS (APCI INTERFACE)
ION-EXCHANGE CHROMATOGRAPHY - Allows separation of ions and polar molecules - Ionic groups are covalently attached to a stationary solid phase - Mobile phase is a liquid - Ionic solutes are electrostatically attracted to the stationary phase
AFFINITY CHROMATOGRAPHY - Very selective Powerful for separating a single biomolecule from a complex mixture of biomolecules - Based on specific interactions between a type of solute molecule and another molecule covalently attached to the stationary phase
SIZE EXCLUSION CHROMATOGRAPHY - Also known as Gel Filtration or Gel Permeation - Solutes are separated based on size - Stationary phase has small pores that exclude large molecules - Small molecules enter the pores so spend more time in column - Large molecules come out of column before small molecules
ADSORPTION CHROMATOGRAPHY - Stationary phase is a solid - Mobile phase is a liquid or a gas - Solute adsorbs to the surface of the solid particles
PARTITION CHROMATOGRAPHY - Stationary phase is a thin liquid coated on the surface of a solid support - Mobile phase is a liquid or a gas - Solute equilibrates between the stationary and mobile phases
SUPERCRITICAL FLUID CHROMATOGRAPHY (SFC) - Applies the ability of supercritical fluids to dissolve poorly volatile molecules - Stationary phase is commonly used column packings - Mobile phase is a supercritical fluid (CO2, C2H6, N2O) - For extracting caffeine from coffee beans and nicotine from cigarette tobacco
CHIRAL CHROMATOGRAPHY - Employs chiral phases to separate enantiomers - Cyclodextrins (complex cyclic carbohydrates) bind enantiomers at different strengths enabling separation - The cyclodextrin pockets come in different sizes which is suitable for separation of enantiomer pairs of different sizes - Relative amount of each enantiomer can also be determined - Chiral GC columns are also available
ELECTROPHORESIS - Migration of ions in an electric field - Cations are attracted to the negative electrode (cathode) - Anions are attracted to the positive electrode (anode)
ELECTROOSMOSIS - The application of electric field to drive fluid in a capillary tube from anode towards cathode Capillary Electrophoresis (CE) - Is a combination of electrophoresis and electroosmosis
CAPILLARY ELECTROPHORESIS (CE) - High-resolution separation method - Separates charged and neutral analytes in a narrow capillary tube - Capillary tube wall is usually fused silica Good technique for the separation of - Small ions (Na+, K+) - Proteins - DNA
CE BACKGROUND ELECTROLYTE (RUN BUFFER) - A buffer solution in the electrode reservoirs - Controls pH and ionic strength
PRINCIPLES OF CE - Both ends of the capillary tube is first immersed in a background electrolyte - One end of tube is dipped in vial containing the sample - Pressure or electric field is applied to introduce ~10 nL of sample into the capillary - Capillary is placed back into the electrolyte - 20 to 30 kV is applied and causes ions in capillary to migrate
PRINCIPLES OF CE - Different ions migrate at different speeds - This results in separation of ions - Ions reach a detector and an electropherogram (response versus time) is recorded - Very narrow bands are usually seen - Terms A and C in the van Deemter equation are reduced (no multiple paths and no stationary phase)
PRINCIPLES OF CE - Electroosmosis sweeps analyte molecules towards the detector - Detector is placed near the cathode - Detector is set to a wavelength of about 200 nm - Cations reach the detector first - Neutral molecules reach the detector after cations - Anions reach the detector after neutral molecules
PRINCIPLES OF CE At High pH - Electroosmosis is faster than electrophoresis - Net flow of anions is towards the cathode At Neutral pH - Electroosmosis is faster than electrophoresis - Net flow of anions is towards the cathode
PRINCIPLES OF CE At Low pH - Electroosmosis is slower than electrophoresis - Net flow of anions is towards the anode - Anions may not reach the detector - Polarity can be reversed to separate anions
MODES OF CE Capillary Ozone Electrophoresis (CZE) - Separation is based on different velocities of different ions Capillary Gel Electrophoresis (CGE) - Separation is based on size of molecules - Molecules are separated upon migrating through a gel in the capillary column - The process is called sieving - Small molecules travel faster than large molecules
MODES OF CE Cpillary Isoelectric Focusing (CIEF) - Used separate proteins, peptides, amino acids - Basis is the presence of both the acidic and basic groups - Separated is based on different isoelectric points by varying pH - Compounds exist as zwitterion with no net charge at a given pH Micellar Electrokinetic Capillary Chromatography (MEKC) - Used to separate different neutral molecules - Also used for ions - Micelles are added to the background electrolyte - An example is sodium dodecyl sulfate (a surfactant)
DETECTORS Similar to those of HPLC - Ultraviolet absorption (most common) - Conductivity - Electrochemical - Fluorescence