1 Lecture
1 Lecture
1 Lecture
A- Plate theory
• The simplest way to think about chromatography is to imagine that a very large
number of "countercurrent distribution equilibrations" occur between the
mobile and stationary phases as the solute travel through the column.
• -It can be imagined that the column is divided into N segments, in each of which
equilibrium occurs of a solute between mobile and stationary phases. Each of
these segments is called a theoretical plate.
• If the total length of the column is L, the height equivalent to a theoretical plate
(H.E.T.P.) is
• By measuring the retention time (tR) or retention volume (VR) and bandwidth (w),
it is possible to measure the number of theoretical plate (N)
• Thus the width (w) is equal to four standard deviations of Gaussian
peak (4). Alternatively, if the width of the band is measured at
height equal to half of the peak height, then
• Note:
-N, the theoretical number of separation steps (plate) in a column
determine its separating capability; N is therefore an indication of
column efficiency.
-if N is constant, the width of chromatographic peak increases with
increasing retention time. That is, successive peaks on a
chromatogram should be increasingly broad.
• This theory was successful in:-
• That is:
1-Equilibration is not infinitely fast (as plate theory assumed) and the
resulting band shape depends on rate of elution.
2-The band shape is also affected by diffusion of the solute along the
length of the column and by availability of different paths for different
solute molecules to follows as they travel between particles of the
stationary phase.
• All of the effects just mentioned depend on the rate, v, at which the mobile
phase passes through the column. Detailed consideration of the various
mechanisms by which the solute band is broadened leads to the "van
Deemeter equation" for plate height (H.E.T.P.)
2 3
• Molecules finding relatively easy pathways including the rapidly moving stream
near the walls of the column, will move ahead of the main part of the band and
elute first (Path 3, in the figure).
• Whilst those following longer more erratic paths will take longer time to move
along the column and therefore lag behind (Path 1 and 2, in the figure).
2) Term "B" (longitudinal Diffusion)
• Longitudinal diffusion is used to describe diffusion that takes place along the axis
of the column and parallel to the movement of the mobile phase.
• Term "B" is related to the longitudinal diffusion in the column. Since the
concentration of the solute is lower at the edges of solute zone than at the center,
solute is always diffusing toward the edge of the zone.
• Longitudinal diffusion is time dependent since the longer a band takes to elute the
more time there will be for diffusion to take place; "B" is therefore inversely
proportional to the velocity of the mobile phase "v"
3) Term "C" (resistance to mass transfer)
-The term "C" account for finite time taken by solute for the mass transfer process
to occur by equilibration between mobile and stationary phases.
• -At high velocity, there is less time available for equilibration, and hence great
band broadening.
• Plot of the height of a theoretical plate (H.E.T.P.) as a function of
mobile-phase velocity (v) using the van Deemter equation. The
contributions to the terms A, B/v, and Cv also are shown
Chromatographic resolution
The goal of chromatography is to separate a sample into a series of
chromatographic peaks, each representing a single component of the
sample. Resolution is a quantitative measure of the degree of separation
between two chromatographic peaks, A and B, and is defined as