Title: ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY CHEM 3811 CHAPTER 21
1ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY CHEM 3811CHAPTER 21
DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor
of chemistry Department of natural
sciences Clayton state university
2CHAPTER 21 CHROMATOGRAPHY AND MASS SPECTROMETRY
3CHROMATOGRAPHY
- The most powerful tool for separating
mixtures - Used for both qualitative and
quantitative analysis
4CHROMATOGRAPHY
Comprises of Two Phases Stationary Phase - A
solid or liquid packed in a column (does not
move) Mobile Phase - A gas or liquid that
passes through the column
5CHROMATOGRAPHY
- A column is packed with the stationary
phase - Mobile phase passes through the
stationary phase - Separation process involves
the interaction of the mobile phase (a mixture)
with the stationary phase
6CHROMATOGRAPHY
eluent
A
B
eluate
7CHROMATOGRAPHY
Adsorption - Occurs when a solute sticks to the
surface of another species - Consider a mixture
containing solutes A and B - A is more strongly
adsorbed to the stationary phase than B - A
moves down the column more slowly than B - B
comes out of column before A
8CHROMATOGRAPHY
Elution - The process of passing a liquid or gas
through a column Eluent - Fluid entering the
column Eluate - Fluid exiting the column
9CHROMATOGRAPHY
Gas Chromatography (GC) - Mobile phase is a
gas Liquid Chromatograpgy - Mobile phase is a
liquid
10CHROMATOGRAPHY
Solutes may be retarded by the stationary phase
based on various interactions - Surface
adsorption - Relative solubility -
Charge Chromatography is classified based on
the type of interactions
11CHROMATOGRAPHY
Adsorption Chromatography - Stationary phase is
a solid - Mobile phase is a liquid or a gas -
Solute adsorbs to the surface of the solid
particles
12CHROMATOGRAPHY
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
13CHROMATOGRAPHY
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
14CHROMATOGRAPHY
Size Exclusion Chromatography (Gel Filtration,
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
15CHROMATOGRAPHY
Affinity Chromatography - Very selective -
Based on specific interactions between a type of
solute molecule and another molecule covalently
attached to the stationary phase
16THE CHROMATOGRAM
- Detector response as a function of time or
elution volume - Different peaks correspond to
different eluates Retention Time (tr) - Time
taken by a solute to reach detector after
injection
17THE CHROMATOGRAM
w1/2 2.35s
tr
tr
h
Detector response
w 4s
Time
1/2h
18THE CHROMATOGRAM
- An ideal chromatogram has a Gaussian shape - h
height of peak - s the standard deviation of
the peak - w base width 4s - w1/2 width
at half height (w at 1/2h) 2.35s - tr and w
can be measured in time or volume units
19THEORETICAL PLATES
- Imaginary way to picture the separation
process - Imaginary discrete sections of the
chromatography column - Though the process is
continuous - Retention of solutes can be
described by the number of equilibrium steps
(theoretical plates)
20THEORETICAL PLATES
The number of theoretical plates on a column (N)
The Plate Height (H) - The length of one
plate H L/N L the length of column
21THEORETICAL PLATES
- The higher the N the narrower the bandwidth -
The higher the N better the separation - The
smaller the H the narrower the peaks - The
smaller the H the better the separation
22THEORETICAL PLATES
To Test a Column for Degradation - Inject
standards periodically - Look for Peak
asymmetry Change in number of plates
23RESOLUTION
- Peak separation (?tr) divided by the average
peak width (wav) - Better resolution implies
more complete separation between neighboring peaks
- Doubling the length of a column (2L) increases
resolution by v2
24QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS
- Identify peaks by comparing retention times to
those of authentic samples - Unknown sample is
spiked (authentic sample is added) - The
relative size of a peak will increase if the
authentic sample is identical to one of the
components - Different compounds may have the
same retention time - It is more likely for
different compounds to have different retention
times on different stationary phases
25QUANTATIVE ANALYSIS
- Chromatographic peak area is proportional to
quantity of solute - A good measure of solute
concentration is obtained by using internal
standards - Internal standards eliminate the
effect of variable conditions - Conditions
mostly vary from run to run
26QUANTATIVE ANALYSIS
Conditions Include - Sample injection errors or
changes - Column changes - Detector variations
27QUANTATIVE ANALYSIS
Internal Standard Method - Concentration of
analyte (canalyte) can be determined using the
concentration of internal standard (cIS) and
both peak areas
28SCALING UP
Analytical Chromatography - For small-scale
analysis Preparative Chromatography - For
large-scale analysis
29SCALING UP
- A developed procedure for analytical
chromatography can be scaled up and used for
preparative chromatography - Maintain column
length and increase cross-sectional area -
Volume flow rate should also be increased by the
same factor
30BAND BROADENING
31BAND BROADENING
May be due to Diffusion - Diffusion of solute
molecules away from the center of the band in
both directions - Longitudinal diffusion - The
faster the flow rate the sharper the peaks -
Broadening is inversely proportion to flow rate
32BAND BROADENING
May be due to Solute Equilibration - If solute
equilibrates slowly between mobile and
stationary phases - Solute in stationary phase
tends to lag behind solute in mobile phase -
Broadening is directly proportional to flow rate
33BAND BROADENING
May be due to Irregular Flow Paths - Occurs
since column is packed with solid particles -
There are random multiple paths for solute
particles - These multiple paths are unequal -
Independent of flow rate
34BAND BROADENING
van Deemter Equation - The plate height equation
as a result of the three band broadening
mechanisms
Multiple paths
Longitudinal diffusion
Equilibration time
35BAND BROADENING
van Deemter Equation u flow rate A, B and C
are constants dependent on - Column - Stationary
phase - Mobile phase - Temperature
36OPEN TUBULAR COLUMN
- Hollow capillary column - Inner wall is
coated with thin layer of stationary phase -
Gives better separation than packed column No
multiple paths (A 0) Can be much longer (gives
less resistance to gas flow) Smaller plate
height - Only useful for analytical
chromatography (can only handle small samples due
to less stationary phase)
37ASSYMETRIC PEAKS
- When a band is overloaded by too much
solute - Band emerges gradually in front - An
abrupt cut off is observed behind the
concentration region - Overloading leaves very
little trails of solute behind the concentrated
region
38ASSYMETRIC PEAKS
- Tailing is when the trailing part is
elongated - Occurs when the stationary phase is
strongly polar has highly adsorptive sites (-OH
groups) Salinization - Chemical treatment to
reduce tailing - Converts -OH groups to nonpolar
-OSi(CH3)3 groups - Column should be replaced
when tailing increases
39MASS SPECTROMETRY
- Measures the masses and abundances of ions in
the gas phase - Detector is sensitive to low
analyte concentrations - Distinguishes
different substances with the same retention
time - Used for both qualitative and
quantitative analysis
40MASS SPECTROMETRY
- Molecules are converted to ions prior to
separation - Molecules entering the ionization
chamber of a mass spectrometer are converted
into ions - Ions are separated based on
mass-to-charge ratio (m/z)
41MASS SPECTROMETRY
Two Common Methods of Ionization Electron
Ionization (EI) - Electrons emitted from a hot
filament are accelerated by 70 V - Molecules are
ionized by striking electrons as they absorb
energy M e- ? M e- e- M is
called the molecular ion M breaks into
fragments after ionization
42MASS SPECTROMETRY
Two Common Methods of Ionization Electron
Ionization (EI) - The most intense peak from
fragments is called the base peak - Other peaks
are expressed as percentages of the base peak
intensity
43MASS SPECTROMETRY
Two Common Methods of Ionization Chemical
Ionization (CI) - Ionization chamber contains a
reagent gas (CH4) - Pressure is maintained at
about 1 mbar - Energetic electrons convert gas
into a variety of products
44MASS SPECTROMETRY
Two Common Methods of Ionization Chemical
Ionization (CI) CH4 e- ? CH4 2e- CH4
CH4 ? CH5 CH3 CH5 then protonates
the analyte CH5 M ? CH4 MH -
Fragmentation is less than EI
45MASS SPECTROMETRY
Types of Mass Spectrometers (Analyzers) Electrost
atic Magnetic Time of flight Ion trap
(quadrupole ion storage) Quadrupole mass
spectrometer
46THE MASS SPECTRUM
- Fragmentation patterns from the mass spectrum
provide information about the structure of
analyte molecule Nominal Mass - Integer mass of
the species with the most abundant isotope of
each element For benzene (C6H6) - The most
abundant isotopes are 12C and 1H Norminal mass
(6 x 12) ( 6 x 1) 78
47THE MASS SPECTRUM
Isotope Pattern - Information is obtained from
relative intensities at M1 and M - M1 is one
mass unit above the molecular ion Nitrogen
Rule - Used to propose composition of molecular
ions - Odd nominal mass implies compound has odd
number of N atoms - Even nominal mass implies
compound has even number of N atoms