COMBINED USE OF TEMPERATURE AND SOLVENT STRENGTH IN REVERSED-PHASE GRADIENT ELUTION .4. SELECTIVITY FOR NEUTRAL (NON-IONIZED) SAMPLES AS A FUNCTION OF SAMPLE TYPE AND OTHER SEPARATION CONDITIONS
Pl. Zhu et al., COMBINED USE OF TEMPERATURE AND SOLVENT STRENGTH IN REVERSED-PHASE GRADIENT ELUTION .4. SELECTIVITY FOR NEUTRAL (NON-IONIZED) SAMPLES AS A FUNCTION OF SAMPLE TYPE AND OTHER SEPARATION CONDITIONS, Journal of chromatography, 756(1-2), 1996, pp. 63-72
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Chemistry Analytical","Biochemical Research Methods
The separation of nine un-ionized samples was studied as a function of
temperature (T) and gradient steepness (b). Selectivity values Delta
log alpha were obtained for 160 compounds, ranging from nonpolar hydr
ocarbons to very polar drugs. Selectivity varied markedly with sample
type: nonpolar compounds such as aromatic hydrocarbons and fatty acid
methyl esters generally showed only modest changes in band spacing as
temperature or gradient steepness was varied. More polar samples exhib
ited larger changes in alpha (Delta log alpha) when temperature and/o
r gradient steepness were changed, but the largest values of Delta log
alpha for these non-ionized samples are less than the average value
of Delta log alpha for the ionized samples of Part III [1]. Poly-func
tional silane (''polymeric'') columns exhibit slightly increased b- an
d/or T-selectivity for some samples.