Title: Gas Chromatography
1Gas Chromatography
2Gas Chromatography
- an analytical separations technique useful for
separating volatile organic compounds - consists of
- Flowing mobile phase (inert gas - Ar, Ne, N)
- Injection port ( rubber septum - syringe injects
sample) - kept at a higher temperature than the boiling
point
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4Principles
- Separation due to differences in partitioning
behavior - selective retardation
5Key Information
- organic compounds separated due to differences in
their participating behavior between the mobile
gas phase and the stationary phase in the column - in contrast to other types of chromatography, the
mobile phase does not interact with molecules of
the analyte its only function is to transport
the analyte through the column
6Gas Chromatography
- Separation column containing stationary phase
- since partitioning behavior independent of
temperature - kept in thermostat - controlled
oven - Detector
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8Schematic of a gas Chromatograph
9The Beginning
- concept of GC announced in 1941 by Martin and
Synge (also did liquid partition chromatography) - 10 years later GC used experimentally
- 1955, first commercial apparatus for GC appeared
on the market
10Today
- estimate 200, 000 gas chromatographs are
currently used through out the world. - 30 instrument manufactures
- 130 different models
- cost 1,500 to 40,000 dollars
- improvements computers- automatic control open
tubular columns-separate a multitude of analytes
in relatively short times
11Uses of Gas Chromatography
- Determination of volatile compounds (gases
liquids) - Determination of partition coefficients and
absorption isotherms - Isolating pure components from complex mixtures
12Instrumentation
13Instrumentation
- flowing mobile phase
- injection port
- separation column
- detector
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18GC detectorsanother powerpoint
19Liquid Chromatography much slower diffusion in
liquid as compared to gas
20Liquid liquid extraction repeated extraction is
basis for LC
21Retardation of solutes in liquid onto a solid
phase
22Elution chromatography
- Increasing polarity of pure solvents
- hexane
- ether
- acetone
- methanol
- water
- acetic acid
- Solvents mixed
- hexane and methanol
- miscible
- can be mixed continuously (solvent programming)
23Types of Liquid Chromatography
- Liquid-solid adsorption on solid which is
generally polar (silica gel, alumina, magnesium
silicates) or reverse phase (cellulose, poly
amides) - Ion exchange specific interactions with ionic
species (change relative strengths of acid or
base)
24Types of Liquid Chromatography
- Liquid-liquid partition between 2 bulk phases
(one immobilized) is highly selective - Liquid exclusion molecular sieve separates
molecules on basis of ability to diffuse into
immobile support
25Retardation based on size of molecule as it
diffuses into porous solid
26High Performance Liquid Chromatography
- Once called High Pressure Liquid Chromatography
27Outline
- What is HPLC?
- An Overview
- Types of HPLC
- Partition Chromatography
- Adsorption Chromatography
- Ion Chromatography
- Size-Exclusion Chromatography
28What is HPLC?
- The most widely used analytical separations
technique - Utilizes a liquid mobile phase to separate
components of mixture - uses high pressure to push solvent through the
column - Popularity
- sensitivity
- ready adaptability to accurate quantitative
determination - suitability for separating nonvolatile species or
thermally fragile ones
29HPLC is.
- Popularity
- widespread applicability to substances that are
of prime interest to industry, to many fields of
science, and to the public - Ideally suited for separation and identification
of amino acids, proteins, nucleic acids,
hydrocarbons, carbohydrates, pharmaceuticals,
pesticides, pigments, antibiotics, steroids, and
a variety of other inorganic substances
30History lesson
- Early LC carried out in glass columns
- diameters 1-5 cm
- lengths 50-500 cm
- Size of solid stationary phase
- diameters 150-200 ?m
- Flow rates still low! Separation times long!
- Eureka! Decrease particle size of packing causes
increase in column efficiency! - diameters 3-10 ?m
- This technology required sophisticated
instruments - new method called HPLC
31Advantages to HPLC
- Higher resolution and speed of analysis
- HPLC columns can be reused without repacking or
regeneration - Greater reproducibility due to close control of
the parameters affecting the efficiency of
separation - Easy automation of instrument operation and data
analysis - Adaptability to large-scale, preparative
procedures
32Advantages to HPLC
- Advantages of HPLC are result of 2 major
advances - stationary supports with very small particle
sizes and large surface areas - appliance of high pressure to solvent flow
33Liquid chromatography
- Instrumentation
- Mobile Phase Reservoir
- Pumping Systems
- Sample Injection Systems
- Liquid-Chromatographic Columns
- Detectors
34Schematic of liquid chromatograph
35LC column
LC injector
36Types of HPLC
- Liquid-solid (adsorption) chromatography
- Liquid-liquid (partition) chromatography
- Ion-exchange chromatography
- Size exclusion chromatography
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38Partition Chromatography
- Most widely used
- Bonded-phase Chromatography
- Silica Stationary Phase
- OH OH OH OH
- O O O
- Si Si Si
Si - Siloxanes O CH3
- Si O Si R
R C8, C18 - O CH3
39Partition Chromatography II
- Reverse Phase Chromatography
- Nonpolar Stationary Phase
- Polar Mobile Phase
- Normal Phase Chromatography
- Polar Stationary Phase
- Nonpolar Mobile Phase
- Column Selection
- Mobile-Phase Selection
40Partition Chromatography III
- Research Applications
- Parathion in Insecticides
- O
- CH3CH2O P O NO2
- CH3CH2O
- Cocaine in Fruit Flies A Study of
Neurotransmission by Prof. Jay Hirsh, UVa
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42Adsorption Chromatography
- Classic
- Solvent Selection
- Non-polar Isomeric Mixtures
- Advantages/ Disadvantages
- Applications
43What is Ion Chromatography?
- Modern methods of separating and determining ions
based on ion-exchange resins - Mid 1970s
- Anion or cation mixtures readily resolved on HPLC
column - Applied to a variety of organic biochemical
systems including drugs, their metabolites,
serums, food preservatives, vitamin mixtures,
sugars, pharmaceutical preparations
44The Mobile Phases are...
- Aqueous solutions
- containing methanol, water-miscible organic
solvents - also contain ionic species, in the form of a
buffer - solvent strength selectivity are determined by
kind and concentration of added ingredients - ions in this phase compete with analyte ions for
the active site in the packing
45Properties of the Mobile Phase
- Must
- dissolve the sample
- have a strong solvent strength leads to
reasonable retention times - interact with solutes in such a way as to lead to
selectivity
46Ion-Exchange Packings
- Types of packings
- pellicular bead packing
- large (30-40 µm) nonporous, spherical, glass,
polymer bead - coated with synthetic ion-exchange resin
- sample capacity of these particles is less
- coating porous microparticles of silica with a
thin film of the exchanger - faster diffusion leads to enhanced efficiency
47Ion-Exchange Equilibria
- Exchange equilibria between ions in solution and
ions on the surface of an insoluble, high
molecular-weight solid - Cation exchange resins
- sulfonic acid group, carboxylic acid group
- Anion exchange resins
- quaternary amine group, primary amine group
CM Cellulose Cation Exchanger
DEAE Cellulose Anion Exchanger
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49Eluent Suppressor Technique
- Made possible the conductometric detection of
eluted ions. - Introduction of a eluent suppressor column
immediately following the ion-exchange column. - Suppressor column
- packed with a second ion-exchange resin
- Cation analysis
- Anion analysis
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51Size Exclusion Chromatography(SEC)
- Gel permeation(GPC), gel filtration(GFC)
chromatography - Technique applicable to separation of
high-molecular weight species - Rapid determination of the molecular weight or
molecular-weight distribution of larger polymers
or natural products - Solute and solvent molecules can diffuse into
pores -- trapped and removed from the flow of the
mobile phase
52SEC(continued)
- Specific pore sizes.average residence time in the
pores depends on the effective size of the
analyte molecules - larger molecules
- smaller molecules
- intermediate size molecules
53SEC Column Packing
- Small (10 µm) silica or polymer particles
containing a network of uniform pores - Two types (diameters of 5 10 µm)
- Polymer beads
- silica-based particles
54Advantages of Size Exclusion Chromatography
- Short well-defined separation times
- Narrow bands--gt good sensitivity
- Freedom from sample loss, solutes do not interact
with the stationary phase - Absence of column deactivation brought about by
interaction of solute with the packing
55Disadvantages
- Only limited number of bands can be accommodated
because the time scale of the chromatogram is
short - Inapplicability to samples of similar size, such
as isomers. - At least 10 difference in molecular weight is
required for reasonable resolution
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57Instrumentation
- Instruments required
- Mobile phase reservoir
- Pump
- Injector
- Column
- Detector
- Data system
58Schematic of liquid chromatograph
59Mobile phase reservoir
- Glass/stainless steel reservoir
- Removal of dissolved gases by degassers
- vacuum pumping system
- heating/stirring of solvents
- sparging
- vacuum filtration
60Elution methods
- Isocratic elution
- single solvent of constant composition
- Gradient elution
- 2 or more solvents of differing polarity used
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62Pumping System I
- Provide a continuous constant flow of the solvent
through the injector - Requirements
- pressure outputs up to 6000 psi
- pulse-free output
- flow rates ranging from .1-10 mL/min
- flow control and flow reproducibility of .5 or
better - corrosion-resistant components
63Pumping System II
- Two types
- constant-pressure
- constant-flow
- Reciprocating pumps
- motor-driven piston
- disadvantage pulsed flow creates noise
- advantages small internal volume (35-400 ?L),
high output pressures (up to 10,000 psi), ready
adaptability to gradient elution, constant flow
rates
64Pumping System III
- Displacement pumps
- syringe-like chambers activated by screw-driven
mechanism powered by a stepper motor - advantages output is pulse free
- disadvantage limited solvent capacity (20 mL)
and inconvenience when solvents need to be
changed - Flow control and programming system
- computer-controlled devices
- measure flow rate
- increase/decrease speed of pump motor
65Sample Injection Systems
- For injecting the solvent through the column
- Minimize possible flow disturbances
- Limiting factor in precision of liquid
chromatographic measurement - Volumes must be small
- .1-500 ?L
- Sampling loops
- interchangeable loops (5-500 ?L at pressures up
to 7000 psi)
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67LC column
LC injector
68Liquid Chromatographic Column
- Smooth-bore stainless steel or heavy-walled glass
tubing - Hundreds of packed columns differing in size and
packing are available from manufacturers
(200-500) - Add columns together to increase length
69Liquid Chromatographic Columns II
- Column thermostats
- maintaining column temperatures constant to a few
tenths degree centigrade - column heaters control column temperatures (from
ambient to 150oC) - columns fitted with water jackets fed from a
constant temperature bath
70Detector
- Mostly optical
- Equipped with a flow cell
- Focus light beam at the center for maximum energy
transmission - Cell ensures that the separated bands do not
widen
71Some Properties of Detector
- Adequate sensitivity
- Stability and reproducibility
- Wide linear dynamic range
- Short response time
- Minimum volume for reducing zone broadening
72More Properties of Detector
- High reliability and ease of use
- Similarity in response toward all analytes
- Selective response toward one or more classes of
analytes - Non-destructive
73Types of Detector
- Refractive index
- UV/Visible
- Fluorescence
- Conductivity
- Evaporative light scattering
- Electrochemical
74Refractive Index I
- Measure displacement of beam with respect to
photosensitive surface of dectector
75Refractive Index II
- Advantages
- universal respond to nearly all solutes
- reliable
- unaffected by flow rate
- low sensitive to dirt and air bubbles in the flow
cell
76Refractive Index III
- Disadvantages
- expensive
- highly temperature sensitive
- moderate sensitivity
- cannot be used with gradient elution
77UV/Visible I
- Mercury lamp
- ? 254nm
- ? 250, 313, 334 and 365nm with filters
- Photocell measures absorbance
- Modern UV detector has filter wheels for rapidly
switching filters used for repetitive and
quantitative analysis
78UV/Visible II
79UV/Visible III
- Advantages
- high sensitivity
- small sample volume required
- linearity over wide concentration ranges
- can be used with gradient elution
80UV/Visible IV
- Disadvantage
- does not work with compounds that do not absorb
light at this wavelength region
81Fluorescence I
- For compounds having natural fluorescing
capability - Fluorescence observed by photoelectric detector
- Mercury or Xenon source with grating
monochromator to isolate fluorescent radiation
82Fluorescence II
- Advantages
- extremely high sensitivity
- high selectivity
- Disadvantage
- may not yield linear response over wide range of
concentrations
83Conductivity
- Measure conductivity of column effluent
- Sample indicated by change in conductivity
- Best in ion-exchange chromatography
- Cell instability
84Evaporative Light Scattering I
- Nebulizer converts eluent into mist
- Evaporation of mobile phase leads to formation of
fine analyte particles - Particles passed through laser beam scattered
radiation detected at right angles by silicon
photodiode - Similar response for all nonvolatile solutes
- Good sensitivity
85Evaporative Light Scattering II
86Electrochemical I
- Based on reduction or oxidation of the eluting
compound at a suitable electrode and measurement
of resulting current
87Electrochemical II
- Advantages
- high sensitivity
- ease of use
- Disadvantages
- mobile phase must be made conductive
- mobile phase must be purified from oxygen, metal
contamination, halides
88Data System
- For better accuracy and precision
- Routine analysis
- pre-programmed computing integrator
- Data station/computer needed for higher control
levels - add automation options
- complex data becomes more feasible
- software safeguard prevents misuse of data system
89Electrophoresischarged species migrate in
electric fieldSeparation based on charge or
mobility
90Capillary electrophoresishigher voltages can be
used as the heat can be dissipated
91Capillary electrophoresis
92The End