Title: Ch' 25 High Performance Liquid Chromatography HPLC
1Ch. 25 High Performance Liquid Chromatography
(HPLC)
2HPLC
- In HPLC solvent at high pressure is forced
through a column to obtain a separation - The instrument is made of a solvent system, an
injection valve, a column, and a detector
3HPLC Process
- Diffusion is much slower in a liquid than gas
- Open tube columns are generally not used in LC
because it takes too long for solute to interact
with stationary phase on the sides of the column - In packed columns, the particle size used affects
the separation results - Particles are typically 2-10 ?m
- Smaller particles provide better resolution
because they reduce terms A and C in the Van
Deemter equation and
4Effects of Particle Size
The optimum flow rate is faster for smaller
particles because diffusion between the mobile
and stationary phases takes place over a shorter
distance than with big particles
5LC Column Design
Columns are steel or plastic and are
typically 20 cm in length with a diameter of a
few mm. A guard column is used to protect
the main column from impurities and dust. This
column contains the same stationary phase as the
main column. The column is usually
kept heated a few degrees above room temperature.
Decreased viscosity at high temperature reduces
the pressure needed to push solvent through the
column, so retention times are reduced.
6The Stationary Phase
The most common support is porous particles
of silica with a stationary phase bonded to the
surface. Octadecyl (C18-ODS) is the most common
stationary phase. Isobutyl groups are used to
protect Si-O bonds from hydrolysis.
7Adsorption Chromatography
Solvent molecules compete with solute molecules
for stationary phase sites in adsorption
chromatography. When a solvent displaces solute,
the solute is eluted from the column. Eluent
strength (e) is a measure of the ability of a
solvent to displace solute from a give adsorbent.
8e For Solvents on Silica
We refer to use of a polar stationary phase
(e.g. SiO) and a less polar solvent as
normal-phase LC. The more polar the solvent,
the higher the e. Reverse-phase LC is more
common. In this case the solvent is more polar
than the stationary phase.
9Elution Conditions
- Elution can be performed isocratically or with a
gradient - Isocratic elution is performed with a constant
solvent (pure or constant mixture) - In gradient elution the solvent mixture is
altered during the run if one solvent is not
satisfactory - In a reverse-phase separation, the solvent is
made gradually more polar (higher e)
10Isocratic Elution
Mixture of acetonitrile and aqueous phase buffer
solution (KH2PO4)
Separation of aromatic compounds, including
alcohols and ketones.
11Gradient Elution
Increasing ratio of acetonitrile during the
analysis behaves like temperature programming in
GC
Segmented gradient diagram
12LC Flowchart
The selection separation procedure is governed by
what the analytes are.
13Parts of the LC
- Solvent pump
- Piston pump is the most common
- Injector
- Usually a loop injector
- Column (already talked about this)
- Detectors
- Spectroscopic
- Refractive index
- Evaporative light scattering
- Electrochemical
14Piston Pump
15Loop Injector
16Spectroscopic Detector
A UV detector with a flow cell is the most
common HPLC detector because most solutes absorb
UV light. In the simplest case, absorbance at
254 nm radiation from a Hg lamp is detected.
Volume of the flow cell is 5-10 µL.
Fluorescence detection is also used for more
sensitive detection. This is not a universal
detector, but can be made very specific. Solutes
can be derivatized for better detection either
pre-column or post-column.
17LC Photodiode Array
18Refractive Index Detector
19Evaporative Light Scattering Detector
20Detector Specifications
21Criteria for Adequate Separation
- Capacity factor (k) should be between 0.5-20
- Smallersolvent distorts early peak
- Biggertoo slow a run
- Minimum resolution of 1.5 for baseline separation
(2 is better in case of long-term effects) - Keep pressure in operating conditions ( 15 MPa
(150 bar 2200 psi) - Peaks should be symmetric
22Method Development Triangle
In reverse-phase chromatography,
acetonitrile (AcN), methanol (MeOH), and
tetrahydrofuran (THF) are the most common organic
solvents. To optimize the right
mixture of solvents for a separation, a triangle
is used. The vertices are optimized separations
for each of the organic solvents/water mixtures.
Then you can optimize the separation more by
mixing equal proportions of each of the
optimized pure solvents until you get something
that meets your criteria for a good separation.
23Steps in LC Analysis
- 1) Goal of the analysis
- 2) Sample preparation
- 3) Detector
- 4) Method triangle
- A) Optimize separations with AcN/H2O, MeOH/H2O,
and THF/H2O - B) Mix solvents from A in 11 ratios to generate
midpoints on triangle and center point (111) - Use computer simulation to optimize from there!
- If by 4B you have not obtained a good separation,
you probably need to try a different column or
form of LC
24Specifications for LC
- Advantages
- Can analyze very complex mixtures
- Robust for multiple samples
- Can analyze polar compounds
- Disadvantages
- Potentially very complex sample preparation
-
- Uses many solvents
- Method development