Tl. Chester et Dp. Innis, DYNAMIC FILM FORMATION AND THE USE OF RETENTION GAPS WITH DIRECT INJECTION IN OPEN-TUBULAR SUPERCRITICAL-FLUID CHROMATOGRAPHY, The Journal of microcolumn separations, 5(3), 1993, pp. 261-273
Open-tubular supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) is a useful tech
nique for many analyses, but is somewhat limited, in current practice,
with respect to trace analysis of liquid samples. Direct injection of
the volumes required for trace analysis with ordinary detectors creat
es a meter or more length of flooded zone and may lead to unacceptable
band broadening. We studied solvent mass transfer on short, uncoated
columns for several solvents forming Type I binary mixtures with CO2,
and found evidence in the solvent peak shapes of distinct liquid and v
apor phases, with the liquid present as a dynamically formed film. Thi
s study suggests that selecting an injection temperature and pressure
to reduce, but not eliminate, the surface tension of the liquid-vapor
interface, and increasing the mobile phase velocity during injection i
ncrease the liquid film thickness and reduce the length of the resulti
ng flooded zone. When a separate uncoated inlet tube (that is, a reten
tion gap) is used to connect the injector with the column, decreasing
the inlet tube radius improves the ratio of maximum effective injectio
n volume to inlet tube volume. Just as in GC, dynamically formed films
function as pseudo-stationary phases during injection. Without a liqu
id film, solutes can be transported by injection-solvent-modified mobi
le phase well beyond the length of a typical film, increasing the diff
iculty of refocusing the solutes before separation. Refocusing solutes
from film-coated flooded zones is easily accomplished using either a
solvent effect (specifically, solvent trapping) or phase-ratio focusin
g. We recommend the use of solvents with phase behavior like toluene a
nd carbon tetrachloride, both of which form films at convenient temper
atures and pressures. We discourage the use of solvents with phase beh
avior like n-pentane which tend to make single-phase, supercritical mi
xtures with CO2 under typical SFC injection conditions.