Hj. Mockel et U. Dreyer, 2ND-ORDER RETENTION EFFECTS IN REVERSED-PHASE LIQUID-CHROMATOGRAPHY .1. INFLUENCE OF SOLUTE SIZE, Chromatographia, 37(3-4), 1993, pp. 179-184
Retention times or volumes in reversed-phase liquid chromatography are
substantially influenced by partial steric exclusion of solutes from
the pore space of the usual octadecyl silica column packings. Contrary
to the common view that exclusion effects become appreciable only wit
h ''large'' molecules, they are clearly observable even with solutes o
f a size similar to or even smaller than eluent molecules. The extent
of exclusion was directly determined from elution volume versus carbon
number plots of n-alkanes with n-pentane eluent. Using high precision
(relative standard deviation < 0,1 %) retention data with methanol el
uent, it was found that the ''effective'' dead volume depends on solut
e chain length. If such data is corrected for partial exclusion, corre
sponding log (capacity factors) as functions of carbon number are abso
lutely linear which is equivalent to perfectly constant methylene sele
ctivity, alpha, within the n-alkane series. Since this observation was
made on various columns with thousands of data, it may be regarded as
a case of experimental proof of Martin's postulate of additivity of r
etention increments of molecular constituents.