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Reversed Phase HPLC Mechanisms

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Title: Reversed Phase HPLC Mechanisms


1
Reversed Phase HPLC Mechanisms
  • Nicholas H. Snow
  • Department of Chemistry
  • Seton Hall University
  • South Orange, NJ 07079
  • snownich_at_shu.edu

2
Reversed Phase HPLC
  • Synthesis of RP Packings
  • RP Column Properties
  • RP Retention Mechanisms
  • Important RP parameters
  • RP Optimization I

3
Synthesis of RP Packings
4
RP Column Preparation
5
Common RP Packings
6
RP Column Properties
  • Hydrophobic Surface
  • Particle Size and Shape
  • Particle Size Distribution
  • Porosity, Pore Size and Surface Area

7
Particle Size
  • Columns have a distribution of particle sizes
  • Reported particle diameter is an average
  • Broader distribution ---gt broader peaks

8
Particle SizeDistribution of several column
batches
Neue, HPLC Columns Theory, Technology and
Practice, Wiley, 1997, p.82
9
RP Mechanism (Simple)
10
Reversed Phase Mechanisms
  • Classical measures of retention
  • capacity factors
  • partition coefficients
  • Vant Hoff Plots
  • Give bulk properties only - do not give molecular
    view of separation process

11
Proposed RP Mechanisms
  • Hydrophobic Theory
  • Partition Theory
  • Adsorption Theory

See Journal of Chromatography, volume 656.
12
Hydrophobic Theory
  • Chromatography of cavities in solvent created
    by hydrophobic portion of analyte molecule
  • Surface Tension
  • Interaction of polar functions with solvent
  • Stationary phase is passive

13
Partition Theory
  • Analyte distributes between aqueous mobile phase
    and organic stationary phase
  • Correlation between log P and retention
  • organic phase is attached on one end
  • Does not explain shape selectivity effects

14
Adsorption Theory
  • Analytes land on surface - do not penetrate
  • Non-polar interactions between analyte
    hydrophobic portion and bonded phase
  • Weak interactions
  • dipole-dipole
  • dipole-induced dipole
  • induced dipole-induced dipole

15
None of these can completely explain all of
the observed retention in reversed phase HPLC
16
Important Reversed Phase Parameters
  • Solvent (mobile phase ) Strength
  • Choice of Solvent
  • Mobile Phase pH
  • Silanol Activity

17
Solvent Strength
  • Water is weak solvent
  • Increased organic ---gt decreased retention
  • Organic must be miscible with water

18
Effect of Solvent
19
Solvent Strength
Snyder and Kirkland, Introduction to Modern
Liquid Chromatography, Wiley, 1979, p. 286.
20
Varying Selectivity
30 MeCN 70 Water
45 MeOH 55 Water
30x0.46 cm C-18, 1.5 mL.min, 254 nm, 10 mg each
Snyder and Kirkland, introduction to Modern
Liquid Chromatography, Wiley, 1979, p. 287.
21
pH
  • Affects ionizable compounds
  • organic acids
  • organic bases
  • In reversed phase we need to suppress ionization
    as much as possible
  • May need very precise pH control

22
pH Effect on Retention
1. Salicylic acid 2. Phenobarbitone 3.
Phenacetin 4. Nicotine 5. Methylampohetamine 30x0
.4 cm C-18, 10 mm, 2 mL/min, UV 220 nm
Snyder and Kirkland, Introduction to
Modern Liquid Chromatography, Wiley, 1979, p. 288.
23
Use of Buffers
  • 0.1 pH unit ---gt significant effect on retention
  • Buffer mobile phase for pH reproducibility
  • pH of buffer should be within 1 pH unit of pKa of
    acid (best at pH pKa)
  • Buffers weak (100 mM or less)
  • Check solubility

24
Common buffers
Useful buffering between pH 2-8.
25
Silanol Activity
  • RP ligands occupy about 50 of silanols
  • Others are active
  • Weak acids

26
Silica Surface
27
Dealing with Residual Silanols
  • Silanols cause peak tailing and excessive
    retention
  • Endcapping
  • bond a smaller group (helps a little)
  • Pre-treatment of silica
  • fully hydroxylated best
  • high purity best

28
Silanol Interactions
  • Hydrogen bonding
  • Dipole-dipole
  • Ion exchange
  • Low pH --gt silanols protonated
  • Add basic modifier (TEA) to compete for sties

29
pH Effect on Tailing
Neue, p196
30
RP Optimization
31
RP Optimization
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