4.6 Article

Peak deformations in preparative supercritical fluid chromatography due to co-solvent adsorption

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY A
Volume 1468, Issue -, Pages 200-208

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2016.09.019

Keywords

Supercritical fluid chromatography; SFC; Solvent adsorption; Adsorption strength; Langmuir band shape; Anti-Langmuir band shape

Funding

  1. Swedish Knowledge Foundation [20150233]
  2. Swedish Research Council (VR) in the project Fundamental Studies on Molecular Interactions aimed at Preparative Separations and Biospecific Measurements [2015-04627]
  3. AForsk Foundation via the project Improved Purification Procedures to Satisfy Modern Drug Quality Assurance and Environmental Criteria [15/497]

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In supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) the mobile phase comprises of carbon dioxide (CO2) as main solvent and smaller amounts of an organic polar solvent (often an alcohol) as co-solvent. The co-solvent is considered to function by changing the overall polarity of the eluent, i.e. by acting as a modifier. However, recent studies indicate that the co-solvent methanol can also adsorb to some common SFC stationary phases. Hence, the co-solvent should also be able to function as an adsorbing additive, i.e. an eluent component that competes with the injected solutes about the stationary phase surface. In this study it was found by fitting different mechanistic models to systematic experimental data, that the co-solvent methanol can have both functions: at low co-solvent fractions, methanol acts as an additive whereas at larger fractions it acts as a modifier. Moreover, it was found that when the co-solvent adsorbs more strongly to the stationary phase than the solute, bizarre deformations of the preparative band shapes can occur. This is illustrated by a solute that converts from a normal Langmuirian band shape to an anti-Langmuirian shape when changing from neat carbon dioxide (CO2) to an eluent containing co-solvent. This peak shape transition is dependent on both (i) the relative retention of the solute and co-solvent to the stationary phase in eluent containing neat CO2 and on (ii) the relative retention of the additive perturbation peak and the solute peak in eluent containing also co-solvent. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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