Influence of stationary phase solvation on shape selectivity and retention in reversed-phase liquid chromatography. 2006

Luxsana Limsavarn, and John G Dorsey
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand.

In the past few decades, shape selectivity has drawn a great deal of attention from chromatographers. The chemistry and characteristics of bonded stationary phases such as phase type, length of bonded phase, surface coverage, and silica surface material have an effect on the shape selectivity of the columns. Although the effects of bonded phase shape selectivity are relatively well understood, one remaining question is the effect of intercalated solvent on shape selectivity. The intercalation of organic modifier and water molecules into the stationary phase is believed to introduce more rigidity into bonded alkyl chains in RPLC. The use of gas chromatography (GC) opens a new dimension to approach this question. C18 columns 4 cm in length were prepared in our laboratory and used in both LC and GC experiments. Shape selectivity and thermodynamic constants for the transfer of a solute from the mobile phase to the stationary phase have been determined as a function of monomeric octadecyl stationary phase bonding densities over the range of 1.44-3.43 micromol/m2 and a polymeric phase (nominal surface coverage 4.77 micromol/m2). Comparing LC and GC experiments, we observed: (a) similar relationships between shape and phenyl selectivities with monomerically bonded C18 phase densities; (b) different correlation of thermodynamic quantities (DeltaH degrees , DeltaS degrees , and DeltaG degrees ) versus bonded phase densities. The effects of high temperature and residual silanol groups are sources of difficulty in elucidation of the intercalated mobile phase role in selectivity and retention for GC measurements.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D002849 Chromatography, Gas Fractionation of a vaporized sample as a consequence of partition between a mobile gaseous phase and a stationary phase held in a column. Two types are gas-solid chromatography, where the fixed phase is a solid, and gas-liquid, in which the stationary phase is a nonvolatile liquid supported on an inert solid matrix. Chromatography, Gas-Liquid,Gas Chromatography,Chromatographies, Gas,Chromatographies, Gas-Liquid,Chromatography, Gas Liquid,Gas Chromatographies,Gas-Liquid Chromatographies,Gas-Liquid Chromatography
D002851 Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid Liquid chromatographic techniques which feature high inlet pressures, high sensitivity, and high speed. Chromatography, High Performance Liquid,Chromatography, High Speed Liquid,Chromatography, Liquid, High Pressure,HPLC,High Performance Liquid Chromatography,High-Performance Liquid Chromatography,UPLC,Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography,Chromatography, High-Performance Liquid,High-Performance Liquid Chromatographies,Liquid Chromatography, High-Performance
D012680 Sensitivity and Specificity Binary classification measures to assess test results. Sensitivity or recall rate is the proportion of true positives. Specificity is the probability of correctly determining the absence of a condition. (From Last, Dictionary of Epidemiology, 2d ed) Specificity,Sensitivity,Specificity and Sensitivity
D013816 Thermodynamics A rigorously mathematical analysis of energy relationships (heat, work, temperature, and equilibrium). It describes systems whose states are determined by thermal parameters, such as temperature, in addition to mechanical and electromagnetic parameters. (From Hawley's Condensed Chemical Dictionary, 12th ed) Thermodynamic

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