Title: HPLC Chromatography
1HPLCChromatography
2Chromatography
- A diverse and important group of methods that
permit separation of closely related components
in complex mixtures - A powerful separation tools
- Qualitative (preparative, purification)
- Quantitative
3Chromatography
- Sample is dissolved in a mobile phase (gas,
liquid or supercritical fluid). - This mobile phase is then forced through an
immiscible stationary phase, which is fixed in
place in a column or a solid surface.
4Classification
- Two ways
- Physical means by which the stationary and mobile
phase are bought into contact (e.g.. column vs.
planar chromatography) - A more fundamental mean based on the types of
mobile and stationary phases and the kinds of
equilibria involved in the transfer of solutes
between phasesHO1.
5Three General Categories
- Liquid Chromatography (plane surfaces and
column) - Gas Chromatography (only in column)
- Supercritical-fluid Chromatography (only in
column)
Today we will cover the liquid chromatography
6Liquid Chromatography
- Plane surfaces (e.g. paper, TLC)
- Column chromatography (hand-packed or pre-packed
columns)
- The solvent moves through
- the paper/thin gel, drawn by
- capillary action
7Elution on Column Chromatography
Elution involves transporting a species through a
column by continuous addition of fresh mobile
phase.
Elution can be achieved by gravity force
(gravity flow, and it can take a long time to
complete
A chromatogram
8Elution on Column Chromatography
Original column LC was with glass column with
gravity flow the technique Is still good for
preparative and purification purposes.
9Applications of Liquid-Chromatography
Skoog/Leary, 1992
10Applications of Liquid-Chromatography
- Exclusion chromatography (MW gt10,000)
- Ion-exchange (Low molecular weight ionic species)
- Adsorption (non-polar species)
- Partition methods (small polar but nonionic
species)
11Liquid-Column Chromatography
- LC can be carried out using a glass tube
hand-packed with a stationary phase (solid)
through which a solvent is allowed to
gravity-flow. - So why do we need all the complicated high-tech
equipment? - One Word SPEED
- A single analysis by "Classical" LC can take
anywhere from 2 to 12 hours to carry out. - HPLC allows an equivalent analysis to be done in
2 to 12 minutes. - Reproducibility. A classical column must be
freshly packed for each analysis, increasing the
chance of errors. A single HPLC column can be
used for hundreds or thousands of samples.
12What is HPLC?
- High-Performance Liquid Chromatography
- Developed in 1960s as faster way to do column
chromatography - Advantages over traditional chromatography
include - Speed
- Adaptability
- resolution
- sensitivity
- columns reusable
13HPLC
- Popularity
- Widely applicable to numerous fields of study
both academic, industrial, and biomedical. - Great for separation of non-volatiles
- Amino acids, proteins, nucleic acids,
hydrocarbons, carbohydrates, pharmaceuticals,
pesticides, terpenids, pigments, antibiotics,
steroids, vitamins, and various other organic and
inorganic substances. - Generally, if a compound can be solublized in
common solvents such as water, alcohol,
acetonitrile, acetone then HPLC can probably be
used.
14HPLC
- One of the most widely used analytical separation
techniques. - Uses a liquid mobile phase to separate components
in a mixture - Used high or low pressure to push solvent through
a separation column - Popular because
- Sensitive
- Accurate, quantitative methods can be used
- Great for separation of non-volatile components,
heat labile compounds, and semi-volatile
compounds. - Non-destructive
15Basic Hardware Components of HPLC
- Solvent Delivery System (Pump)
- Injector (introduce samples)
- Column guard
- Column (containing stationary phase)
- Detectors (eyes )
- Waste Collector
- Recorder (Data Collection)
16Diagram of HPLC
17Old Time HPLC!
Integrator (recorder)
Line filter
Detectors
Solvent reservoir
Pump
Injector
Column
Column guard
18Modern HPLC
19Pumps
- Ideal pumps
- Ability to generate high pressure
- Pulse-free output
- Accurate control of flow
- Corrosion resistant
- Role Deliver the mobile phase
- Two groups of pumps
- Constant pressure
- Constant volume
- Three types of pumps are available
- Reciprocating pumps (90 of Commercial HPLC
produce pulse flow) - Displacement pumps (produce flow that are
independent of viscosity and - back pressure)
- 3) Pneumatic pumps (cannot do gradient and
pressure less than 2000psi) -
20Injectors
Most common injector is sample loop (5-500uL
0.5-5uL)
21Columns
- Analytical column variables
- Length (10-30 cm)
- ID (4-10mm)
- Packing (many kinds)
- Particles sizes (3-10 µm)pore sizes
- Most common columns 25cm x 4.6 id with 5µm
particles - Preparative columns
22Detectors
- Visualize separated compounds and translate the
concentration changes into signals - Using every conceivable physical and chemical
properties - Characteristics of an ideal detector
- Adequate sensitivity
- Good stability and reproducibility
- Gives linear response to analysts that have
several ranges magnitudes - Short response time
- High reliability and ease of use
- Similarity in response toward all analyst
- Non-destructive
23Detectors
- Two basic types of detectors
- Bulk property detectors response to a
mobile-phase bulk property - Refractive index
- Dielectric constant
- Density
- Solute property detectors response to solute
property - Spectroscopy (IR, UV, MS, Fluorescence)
24Most Common HPLC Detectors
- Absorbance (Absorption of UV-Vis based on Beers
law) - Fluorescence
- Electrochemical
- Refractive index
- Conductivity
- Mass spectrometry
- FI-IR
- Light scattering
- Others (under development, not on the market)
25Popular Types of Detectors (Top 4)
- UV/Visible absorption detectors
- Fluorescence
- Refractive Index (RI)
- Electrochemical (ED)
26UV/Vis Absorbance Detectors
- Compounds with strong UV/Vis chromophores
- Compounds with conjugated or nonconjugated double
bonds aromatic molecules - AD Simple, reliable, inexpensive, compatible
with gradient elution and non-destructive - Dis-AD Not as sensitive as fluorescence
detection, ED, not-universal (only for molecules
with chromophores) - Samples of use vitamins, carotenoids,
phytonutrients
27UV/Vis Absorbance Detectors
- uv/vis - you can purchase
- fixed wavelength
- variable wavelength
- diode array
28UV/Vis Absorbance Detectors
Light sources Deuterium or tungsten filament
sources
The Variable Wavelength UV Detector uses a
monochromator (slits and a grating) to select one
wavelength of light to pass through the sample
cell.
The Photodiode Array Detector passes all
wavelengths of light through the sample cell,
then focuses each wavelength on a single sensor
element.
29Absorbance Detector Output
30Fluorescence Detectors
- Compounds with fluorophors
- By nature (carbamate pesticides, aflatoxins,
vitamins, amino acids) - By post-column derivatization
- AD Highly sensitive (femtomole 10-15), low
background, highly selective (two distinct wave
lengths instead of one in Ab detector), can solve
co-elution problems, post-column derivatization
can be used for this detection - Dis-AD Perceived difficulty of its use, more
instrumental variables to account for during
optimization, changes in fluorescence can occur
with pH and viscosity - Samples of use vitamins E, drugs, aflatoxins
31Fluorescence Detector Configuration
32Refractive Index Detectors
- Compounds that do not have strong UV/Vis
chromophores, fluorophours, electrochemical
activity or ionic conductivity - AD Universal in nature
- Dis-AD Lack of sensitivity impractical for
gradient elution instability of base line - Samples of use organic acids, sugars, fungal
metabolites, oligosaccharides
33Recorder/Data Collections
- Many recoding devices are available
- Strip-chart recorder (retention time/Peak areas
or peak height) - Integrator
- Computer controlled data collections