Separation Techniques: Prepared by
Separation Techniques: Prepared by
Separation Techniques
Prepared by:
Outline
Classical Techniques
Column Chromatography
Flash Chromatography
Planner Chromatography
Instrumentation Techniques
Outline
Hardware & Software
Types of Pumps
Types of Columns
Types of Detectors
Sample Preparation Techniques
Channels & Dimensions
Coupling of Detectors
Parameters
Acquisition Parameters
Processing Parameters
Statistical Parameters
Recording Parameters
Performance parameters
Classical Techniques
Prepared by:
What is Separation?
Definition
The isolation of components of mixtures into their
purest form
Purpose
Enhance the Purity
Identify
Quantify
Filtration
Mechanical Separation
Floatation
Centrifugation
Simple Distillation
Fractional Distillation
Crystallization
Chromatography
6
Filtration
Purpose
To separate
Insoluble Solid
from Liquid
Mechanical Separation
Purpose
Physical separation
methods that involve
the use of tools such
as forceps and sieves,
to separate the
components of a
mixture.
Floatation
Purpose
Separation method
in which some
solids of a
suspension
mixture are
allowed to settle
and the less dense
material is poured
off.
Centrifugation
Purpose
The separation of
suspended solid from
a liquid through the
centripetal force
developed during the
rotation of the
centrifuge.
10
Simple Distillation
Purpose
This is a technique
used to separate a
mixture of a
soluble substance
and a solvent.
11
Fractional Distillation
Purpose
This is the technique
used to separate a
mixture of two miscible
liquids with different
boiling points.
12
Crystallization
Purpose
Fractional
crystallization is
done by lowering
of temperature of a
mixture or solution
so that the more
insoluble
component
crystallizes out
first. (Uses
solubility to
separate
substances)
13
Principle
of
Chromatography
Prepared by:
What is Chromatography?
15
What is Chromatography?
History
Greek
Chromato-Graphy
Chroma means color
Graphein to write
Color - Writing
16
What is Chromatography?
Compound A (Benzene)
Compound B (Toluene)
Compound C (Xylene)
Compound D (Mesitylene) Qualitative
Analysis
Quantitative
Analysis
Compound A (10ppm)
Compound B (10pbb)
Compound C (20ppm)
Compound D (25ppm)
17
Classification
of
Chromatography
Prepared by:
Classification of Chromatography
Chromatography
Chromatographic
Bed Shape
Physical State
of
Mobile Phase
Separation
Mechanism
Special Techniques
19
Classification of Chromatography
Planer
Chromatography
Paper
Chromatography
Column
Chromatography
Thin layer
Chromatography
Classical Column
Chromatography
Flash Column
Chromatography
20
Classification of Chromatography
Planer Chromatography
Paper
Chromatography
Ascending
Chromatography
Descending
Chromatography
21
Paper Chromatography
Ascending Chromatography
Lid
Clamp
Paper
Solvent Front
Sample
Mobile Phase
Chromatography jar
22
Paper Chromatography
Descending Chromatography
Lid
Clamp
Paper
Mobile Phase
Solvent Front
Chromatography jar
23
Classification of Chromatography
Planer Chromatography
Distance Travel
by Compound
Solvent Front
Rf = 1.00
5
4
Distance Travel
by Solvent
3
2
1
Rf = 0.82
Rf = 0.65
Rf = 0.40
Rf = 0.38
Rf = 0.00
24
Column Chromatography
25
Classification of Chromatography
Gas
Chromatography
Liquid
Chromatography
Planer
Chromatography
Column
Chromatography
26
Classification of Chromatography
Separation Mechanism
Separation Mechanism
Ion Exchange
Chromatography
Cation
Chromatography
Electrophoresis
Chromatography
Size Exclusion
Chromatography
Anion
Chromatography
27
Classification of Chromatography
Special Techniques
Special Techniques
Moving-Bed
Chromatography
Supercritical Fluid
Chromatography
Two-dimensional
Chromatography
Pyrolysis Gas
Chromatography
Chiral
Chromatography
Countercurrent
Chromatography
28
Principle of HPLC
Prepared by:
Outline
30
Scope of HPLC
Simultaneous Analysis
High Resolution
High Sensitivity (ppm-ppb)
Good repeatability
Small sample size
Moderate analysis condition
- no need to vaporize the sample like GC
Easy to fractionate the sample and purify
Non-destructive
31
Scope of HPLC
Field
Typical mixtures
Pharmaceuticals
Biochemical
Food products
Industrial chemicals
Forensic chemistry
Environmental field
Clinical medicine
Scope of HPLC
106
Size
exclusion
Gel
filtration
105
104
Normal
phase
103
Reversed
phase
Ion
exchange
Nonionic polar
Nonpolar
Ionic
Water-insoluble
Water-soluble
Increasing polarity
102
Molecular weight
Gel
permeation
Concept of HPLC
Column
Injector
Pump
Detector
Oven
Mobile Phase
Data Processing
34
Mobile Phase
Prepared by:
Isocratic system
Gradient system
Isocratic
Gradient
B%
B%
Time
Time
36
Elution Modes
MeOH / H2O = 6 / 4
Volts
Bad Separation
Isocratic
MeOH / H2O = 8 / 2
Isocratic
MeOH%
Gradient
Time
( Column : ODS )
37
Isocratic System
Column
Injector
Pump
Detector
Oven
Mobile Phase
Data
processor
Simple system with one pump and one solvent reservoir.
If more than one solvent is used, solvents should be premixed.
38
Column
Injector
Detector
Oven
Pump
Low pressure
gradient valve
Data
processor
D
39
pump
Mixer
pump
Injector
Column
Oven
Detector
Data
processor
pump
41
Injector
Prepared by:
HPLC Injectors
Manual injector
Auto injector
43
Cautions
Do not use pointed or beveled needle tip.
Must use square end type.
Do not use more than pH 10 solution.
Must change rotor seal.
44
Column
Prepared by:
Ion chromatography
Affinity chromatography
46
Understand Columns
Column is the heart of the separation
47
Separation Mechanism
Due to different interaction between stationary phase and
different sample, the molecules move at different rate,
therefore separation can be done.
Mobile Phase
1
Stronger
interaction
Weaker
interaction
Stationary Phase
48
: Polar property
49
CH3
C4 (butyl) type
Si O Si C
C
HH
Ph
CH
37
318
4H
9CN
3
8
366
17
Phenyl type
CH3
TMS type
Non-polar
Cyano type
Non-polar property
Mobile phase:
Polar property
50
Mobile Phase
Water / buffer + Organic solvent
Organic solvents:
Methanol
Acetonitrile
THF
Buffer:
Phosphate buffer
Acetate buffer
etc
Ratio of aqueous and organic solvents is important
51
Interaction
Hydrophobic Interaction
A Less polar analyte
B More polar analyte
B
A
A
A
A
Support
particle
Nonpolar
bonded phase
Interstitial area
(mobile phase)
Hydrophobicity
If the sample has more
CH3CH2CH2--
: Carbon chain
: Aromatic group
Hydrophobicity is stronger
If the sample has more
-COOH : Carboxyl group
-NH2
: Amino group
-OH
: Hydroxyl group
Hydrophobicity is weaker
53
C18 (ODS)
Strong
OH
Weak
1
54
30 % H2O
40% H2O
1
Solvent : MeOH
1 : p-Hydoxymethylbenzoate
2 : p-Hydoxyethylbenzoate
3 : p-Hydoxypropylbenzoate
4 : p-Hydoxybutylbenzoate
55
C8
Medium
C18 (ODS)
sample
Strong
C4
sample
Weak
sample
56
2 3
C8
C4
Peaks
1. Methyl benzoate
2. Ethyl benzoate
3. n-Propyl benzoate
4. n- Butyl benzoate
57
Residual Silanol
C18
OH
C18
silica gel
OH
C18
C18
Residual Silanol
58
End Capping
silica gel
C18
OH
C18
OH
C18
C18
TMS treatment
silica gel
C18
O-TMS
C18
O-TMS
C18
C18
59
Peaks
1. Propranolol
2. Acenaphthene
3. Ammitriptyline
Shim-pack VP-ODS
Other column
60
M+
C18
O-TMS
M+
C18
silica core
O-TMS
M+
C18
C18
Surface metal
O
O
OH
M+
Si
Internal metal
(activated silanol)
61
Detector
Prepared by:
(UV/VIS)
(PDA)
Fluorescence detector
(RF)
Conductivity detector
(CDD)
(RID)
Electrochemical detector
(ECD)
(ELSD)
(MS)
63
Instrumentation
of
HPLC
Customer Support Centre
Instrumentations
HPLC
Solvent delivery pumps
Sample injectors
Columns
Column ovens
Detectors
65
Column
Injector
Pump
Detector
Oven
Mobile Phase
Data Processing
66
Rack Changer
Oven CTO-20A/C
Pump
Pump
Pump
Plunger Reciprocating
out
check valve
pump head
motor and cam
5 - 50L
plunger
check valve
plunger seal
in
Mobile phase
70
Pump
Plunger Reciprocating
Consists of a small chamber in which the solvent is pumped
by the back and forth motion of a motor-driven piston
Advantage
71
Pump
check valve
plunger
plunger
check valve
72
Pump
Main
plunger
check valve
73
Injector
Injector
Cautions
Do not use pointed or beveled needle tip.
Must use square end type.
Do not use more than pH 10 solution.
Must change rotor seal.
75
Injector
to Column
LOAD
from Pump
to Column
INJECT
76
Injector
Manual injector
- Sample measurement
Partial-filling
The volume of the sample loaded is limited to half
the sample loop volume.
Complete-filling
In order to replace all the mobile phase in the loop,
excess sample (two to five loop volumes) must be
used.
77
Injector
Injection Method
Partial Injection Method
better to inject less than half volume of sample loop
Loop Injection Method
Response of Detector
Loop injection
Partial
injection
Half volume
of sample loop
3 times volume
of sample loop
Volume of Injection
78
Injector
79
Injector
Caution
80
Injector
Inside of SIL-20AC
81
Injector
82
Injector
83
Column Oven
Column Ovens
The temperature fluctuation of column will influence retention time
reproducibility.
CTO-20A/20AC
85
Column
Column
:
:
polar property
non polar property
88
Column
General use
General use
Sugar analysis
Protein analysis
-Si-CH2CH2CH2CN
-Si-CH2CH2CH2NH2
-Si-CH2CH2CH2OCH(OH)-CH2(OH)
Si
Si
Silica gel
Modified
89
Column
Interaction
OH
Non-polar
Si-OH
Si
O
Si-OH
Hexane
OH
Column
Interaction
If the sample has
-COOH :
Carboxyl group
-NH2
: Amino group
-OH
: Hydroxyl group
Hydrogen bonding becomes strong
91
Column
Retention Time
Strong
HO
SiOH
SiOH
Si
Weak
OH
Very Weak
3
or
92
Column
Secondary solvents
Methyl-t-butyl ether (MTBE), Diethyl ether, Tetrahydrofuran (THF),
Dioxane, Pyridine, Ethyl acetate, Acetonitrile, Acetone, 2-Propaol,
Ethanol, Methanol
Column
2 3
2 % EtOAc
5% EtOAc
1 : Dioctyl phthalate
2 : Dibutyl phthalate
3 : Diethyl phthalate
4 : Dimethyl phthalate
Solvent : Hexane
94
Column
Parameter
Normal Phase
Reverse Phase
Polarity of Column
High
Low
Polarity of Solvent
Low
High
Elution Sequence
Faster Elution
Slower Elution
95
Ion-Pair Mode
Ion-Pair Chromatography
Column
Interaction
O
H2O/MeOH 1:1
C4
SO3-Na+
+ Cn
C4
O
Inject
C4
Mobile Phase
C4
Si-OSiC18
Si
C4 -OH
N+
Cn
SO3-
N+
C4
O
C4
Ion-Pair Reagent
O
97
C4
Ion-Pair Chromatography
Column
How it works?
98
Ion-Pair Chromatography
Column
Reagents
Anion Compounds
Tetra-n-butylammonium hydroxide (TBA)
Cation Compounds
Butanesulfonic acid sodium salt
Pentanesulfonic acid sodium salt
Hexanesulfonic acid sodium salt
Heptanesulfonic acid sodium salt
Octanesulfonic acid sodium salt
Decanesulfonic acid sodium salt
(C4)
(C5)
(C6)
(C7)
(C8)
(C10)
99
Ion-Pair Chromatography
Column
Important Considerations
Separation Example
Benzoic acid
Column:
C18 (ODS) Column
Mobile phase:
Toluic acid
H2O/MeOH 1:1
Tetrabutyl ammonium hydroxide
100
Ion-Pair Chromatography
Column
Important Considerations
Type of Ion-Pair reagents
RCOO- + H+
R-COOH
(pKa=4.5)
R-NH2 + H+
R-NH3+
(pKa=6.0)
101
Ion-Pair Chromatography
Column
Ion-Pair Chromatography
Advantages
Ions and neutral compounds can usually be done in the same run.
Disadvantages
Ion-Pair Chromatography
Column
103
Ion-Pair Chromatography
Column
Precautions
In case of amine modifier or TBA ion pair reagent used as a mobile
phase, the column must be washed when analysis is finished
In order to remove these amine modifier or TBA ion pair reagent,
sodium
perchlorate
is
effectively
working.
Because
sodium
104
Ion-Exchange Mode
Ion Chromatography
Column
106
Ion Chromatography
Column
TYPES
Biological Fields
(Protein, Peptide, Amino Acid Analysis)
Ion chromatography
Cation Exchangers
(SCX)
(R-SO3 )
(WCX)
(R-COO )
Anion Exchangers
Strong Anion Exchange
Weak Anion Exchange
(SAX)
(WAX)
(R4N )
(DEAE)
DEAE=Diethylaminoethyl cellulose
107
Ion Chromatography
Column
Silica/resin
NR3
Sample
Anion
exchanger
xRN(CH3)3+OH- + Ax-
[RN(CH3)3+]xAx- + xOH-
108
Ion Chromatography
Column
Silica/resin
SO3
Sample
Cation
exchanger
xRSO3-H+ + Mx+
(RSO3-)xMx+ + xH+
109
Ion Chromatography
Column
SO3-
K+
SO3- H+
SO3- H+
Resin or gel
Resin or gel
H+
SO3- H+
SO3- H+
Potassium Ion (K+) in the sample exchange with the H+ ion, before being
displaced again by the H+ ion and elute from the column.
110
Ion Chromatography
Column
Analytical Conditions
Column : Shim-pack IC-A3
Mobile phase :
3.2 mM Bis-Tris *
Flow rate : 1.5 mL/min
Temperature : 40C
Injection Volume : 100 L
Peaks
1. F(1.4 ppm)
2. Cl(10200 ppm)
3. NO2(10 ppm)
4. Br(43 ppm)
5. NO3(44 ppm)
6. SO42(431 ppm)
111
Ion Chromatography
Column
Analytical Conditions
Temperature : 40C
Peaks
1. Na+
(8.25 ppm)
2. NH4+
(0.01 ppm)
3. K+
(1.66 ppm)
4. Mg2+
(2.22 ppm)
5. Ca2+
(11.85 ppm)
112
Ion Chromatography
Column
Protein Analysis
Analytical Conditions
Column : Shim-pack WCX-1
Mobile phase :
[A] 20 mM phosphate buffer (pH=6.0)
[B] 0.25M sodium sulfate
[A] - [B] 30 min linear gradient
Flow rate : 1.0 mL/min
Temperature : ambient
Detector : UV-280 nm
Injection volume : 10 uL
Peaks
1. albumin
2. myoglobin
3. a-chymotrypsinogen A
4. liponuclease A
5. lisozyme
113
Ion Chromatography
Column
Important Considerations
pH of Buffer solution
Concentration of Buffer solution
Elution Method
Isocratic elution
pH gradient elution
increasing Ionic strength gradient
114
Column
Types
116
Column
Principle
No Interaction Force
Difference of traveling Time
117
Column
Elution order
SEC Column
118
Column
Time
119
Column
Purpose
GPC
Molecular Weight, Measurement and Distribution of Polymer
GFC
Separation of Protein
120
Column
121
Column
Protein Separation
Analytical Conditions
Column : Asahipak GFA-50
Mobile phase :
0.1 M sodium phosphate
0.1 M NaCl (pH=7.0)
Flow rate : 0.5 mL/min
Temperature : ambient
Detector : UV-280 nm
Injection volume : 10 uL
Peaks
1. glutamate dehydrogenase
2. lactate dehydrogenase
3. enolase
4. adenylate kinase
5. cytochrome C
122
Chiral Mode
Column
Chiral Mode
Enantiomer
Chemical properties are all the same
Physical properties are all the same
except optical rotation
H
*Chiral Center
*C
C*
COOH
HOOC
NH2
NH2
(L) form
(D) form
124
Column
Chiral Mode
Absolute Configuration
Use Cahn, Ingold, Prelog priorities
Place the lowest priority group back
(focus down C - 4 bond)
draw arrow from 1-2-3
1
1
clockwise
counterclockwise
4
4
2
2
3
3
(R)
(S)
1
OH
1
OH
4
H
HO2C
2
CH3
3
CH3
3
(S)
Lactic Acid
H
CO2H
2
(R)
(R)(+) Thalidomide
O O
H
(S)(-) Thalidomide
O O
H
N
N
O
a sedative and hypnotic
H
N
O
a teratogen
125
H
N
O
Column
Chiral Mode
Diastereomers
Stereo-isomers That Are Not Mirror Images
H OH
3
CO2H
H OH
3
CO2H
Br H
H Br
(2S,3S)
(2S,3R)
same stereochemistry at C2 (S)
opposite stereochemistry at C3
126
Column
Chiral Mode
Chiral Chromatography
A system that contains an appropriate chiral selector
Only chiral selectors or chiral irradiation (e.g. a polarised light beam
which consists of two chiral circular-polarised components) can
distinguish between two enantiomers
Chiral selectors can be an appropriate chiral molecule or a chiral
surface
Separation of enantiomers
Gas chromatography
Supercritical fluid chromatography
Capillary electrophoresis
Chiral HPLC
127
Column
Chiral Mode
Chiral HPLC
128
Column
Chiral Mode
Chiral Derivatization
Involves reaction of an enantiomeric molecule with an enantiomerically
pure chiral derivatization agent (CDA) to form two diastereomeric
derivatives.
Diastereomeric derivatization
(S) + (R)
(S)-(R)
Enantiomer
Diastereomer
(R) + (R)
(R)-(R)
129
Column
Chiral Mode
130
Column
Chiral Mode
131
Column
Chiral Mode
Protein
Carbohydrate
Pirkle
Cyclodextrin
etc.
132
Column
Chiral Mode
Protein-derived CSP
Bovine serum albumin
Human serum albumin
1-acid glycoprotein
Ovomucoid
Cellobiohydrolase
Pepsin
Column
Chiral Mode
Column
Chiral Mode
135
Column
Chiral Mode
Derivatization
Derivatization with an achiral reagent often enhances enantiomeric
separation on Pirkle columns.
The most easily derivatizable groups are alcohols, amines, and
acids.
The drawbacks to derivatization are increased method development
time and the additional time needed for the derivatization reaction.
Common derivatizating reagents include N-imidazole-N-carbonic
acid-3,5-dinitroanilide, alpha-naphthylisocyanate, 3,5-dinitobenzoyl
chloride, 2-naphthoyl chloride, and 3,5-dinitroaniline, etc.
136
Column
Chiral Mode
137
Column
Selection
Mode
Compound type
Reverse Phase
Neutral or Non-ionized
Compounds soluble in
water/organic mixtures
Ion-Pair RP
Normal Phase
Hexane, CH2Cl2
Ion Exchange
H2O/Buffer
Column
Selection
Mode
Compound type
GPC/GFC
Chiral
Organic/Water Mixtures
Optical Isomer
Column
Polarity of Common
Organic Functional Groups & Solvents
Functional groups
Organic solvents
Non-polar
Aliphatic hydrocarbons
Olfins
Aromatic hydrocarbons
Halids
Sulfides
Ethers
Nitro compounds
Esters, Aldehydes, Ketones
Alcohols, amine
Sulfones
Sulfoxides
Amides
Polar
Carboxylic acids
Hexane
Carbon tetrachloride
Ether
Benzene
Methylene chloride
THF
Iso-propanol
Chloroform
Ethyl acetate
Acetonitrile
Methanol
Water
140
Column
Column Dimension
Type
Inner diameter
(cm)
Length
(cm)
Particle size
(m)
Analytical
0.3 - 0.46
3 - 25
3 - 10
Semimicro
0.1 0.21
3 25
38
Semipreparative
0.8 1.0
10 - 25
5 - 10
Preparative
2.0 5.0
10 25
10 - 20
141
Detector
Detector
PDA
RF
Fluorescence detector
CDD
Conductivity detector
RID
ECD
Electrochemical detector
ELSD
MS
Detector
Grating
Sample Cell
M1
Ein
Eout
Ein
Eout
Photodiode
M2
Photodiode
Reference Cell
Light source
D2 / W lamp
144
Detector
Absorbance
2.5
Actual
A : absorbance
: molar absorptivity
C : analyte concentration
L : path length of the flow cell
E : energy
Backgroud absorbance
Concentration
145
Detector
208 nm
275 nm
Which one is
better???
Chromatogram obtained by
UV-Vis detector at 275nm.
208 nm
UV-Vis Spectrum
The compound has two absorbance
bands at 208nm & 275nm.
Chromatogram obtained by
UV-Vis detector at 208nm.
146
Detector
Additional Functions
147
Detector
148
Detector
149
Detector
150
Detector
Detector
Sample Cell
D2 / W lamp
Grating
152
Detector
Absorbance
Chromatogram
Time
153
Detector
154
Detector
Sample
Standard
155
Detector
PDA Detector
Advantages:
PDA Detector could analyze a sample simultaneously at
many different wavelengths.
UV Visible spectra are useful for compound identification,
checking peak purity, as well as finding the optimum
absorbance for the compounds.
UV Visible spectra of many compounds could be stored in the
spectrum libraries, which are useful for compound
identification.
Relatively robust to temperature and flow rate fluctuations
Compatible with gradient elution.
Disadvantages:
Slightly less sensitive than UV-Visible detector.
156
Detector
Detector
Fluorescence detector
Excitation Wavelength
+ hn1
hn2+
A*
Emission Wavelength
hn2
hn1
A
Fluorescence
A
158
Detector
Cell Design
159
Detector
Derivatization Reagents
OPA reagent for primary amines
CHO
+ R-NH2
CHO
N-R
o-phthalaldhyde
(OPA)
CH2OCOR
9-anthryldiazomethane
(ADAM)
160
Detector
161
Detector
162
Detector
Conductivity detector
K (conductivity) = I [A] / E [V]
=A [cm2] / L [cm] * k
(k : specific conductivity)
V
I
k= (I/E)*(L/A)
L
electrode
163
Detector
Conductivity detector
164
Detector
Electrochemical Detector
Working
electrode
Reference
electrode
AUX electrode
165
Detector
R
e-
Electrode
Glassy Carbon (GC)
Pt, Ag, Au
[ Applications ]
GC : Phenol compounds
general use
Pt : H2O2
Ag : Halogen ion
Au : Sugar analysis
166
Chromatogram
Signal
tR
Peak
tR : Retention time
A : Area
h
A
h : Height
Time
168
Chromatogram
169
170
Rs = 1.0
Rs = 1.50
Peak shape is not triangle
but Gaussian distribution.
171
Factors
1
R
k'
N
k '1
N : average of N1 and N2
k' : average of k'1 and k'2
172
Capacity Factor, k
k =
t1 - t0
t0
t1
t0
t1 = retention time of a solute peak
t0 = column void time solvent peak
(non retained peak)
173
Selectivity,
k2
k1
t2 - t0
t1 - t0
t1
t2
t0
Selectivity is an indication of the degree of
separation between two peaks
174
Equation :
N = 16 x ( Rt / W )2
Area
H
W1/2
H1/2
175
Contribution of Capacity
1
1
R 4
k'
N
k'1
k'
1
2
3
4
10
20
50
100
(k'/k'+1)
1/2
2/3
3/4
4/5
10/11
20/21
50/51
100/101
contribution
0.500
0.667
0.750
0.800
0.909
0.952
0.980
0.990
176
Contribution of Selectivity
1
1
R 4
k'
N
k'1
1
2
3
10
13
17
20
( -1/)
0/1
1/2
2/3
10/11
12/13
16/17
19/200
contribution
0.000
0.500
0.667
0.909
0.923
0.941
0.950
177
Contribution of Efficiency
1
1
R 4
k'
N
k'1
N
8000
10000
15000
20000
30000
1/2
(N)
89
100
122
141
173
contribution
--0.12
0.37
0.58
0.94
178
How to increase N ?
H = Length of Column / N
Linear velocity
179
0.6 mL/min
0.8 mL/min
1.0 mL/min
180
3 mm
5 mm
Using smaller
particle size!
10 mm
Flow rate
4.0 mmID
4.6 mmID
6.0 mmID
0.6 mL/min
0.8 mL/min
1.0 mL/min
181
How to increase k ?
By decreasing % of organic solvent
k<2
Insufficient separation
k > 10
Long running time
Broad band, cause
(1) low sensitivity
(2) poor accuracy
Rs
0 2 4 6 8 10
k= 2 - 10 is preferable.
2- 10
1- 20
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20
182
Solvent Optimization
100% MeOH
0.1<K<0.3
80% MeOH
0.6<K<1.7
How to improve ?
By changing
mobile phase and composition
pH
concentration of buffer
column temperature
packing material (to C8, CN and Phenyl)
184
[ MeOH/H2O ]
critical pair
: c,d
[ MeOH/THF/H2O ]
a
c
b
[ THF/H2O ]
critical pair
: a,b
c
b
1:benzoic acid
2:sorbic acid
3:methylparaben
[analytical conditions]
1mL/min
ODS column
10mM phosphate
buffer 75%
Acetonitrile 25%
40oC
UV-240 nm
186
H+
RCOO- +
(pKa=4.5)
R-NH3+
R-NH2 + H+
(pKa=6.0)
pKa
dissociated type
pH (mobile phase)
187
Precaution of pH Adjustment
associated type
dissociated type
pH (mobile phase)
When pH of mobile phase is very close to pKa of target sample, pH
adjustment must be very careful, since pH of mobile phase will
influence k.
Normally, pH which does not affect k should be selected.
188