4.8 Article

Confocal Raman Microscopy of the Interfacial Regions of Liquid Chromatographic Stationary-Phase Materials

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 81, Issue 8, Pages 2869-2876

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac802541p

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-FG03-93ER14333]

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The influence of organic modifiers on the structure of reversed-phase liquid chromitographic (RPLC) stationary phases has been a topic of considerable investigation. Retention of organic modifiers in the stationary phase has previously been determined by chromatographic measurements, and the polarity and heterogeneity of the resulting solvation environment has been studied using solvatochromic, fluorescent, and spin probes. In the present work, the composition and solvation environment of a stationary phase is investigated using confocal Raman microscopy, which allows the in situ examination of the solvation environment within individual chromatographic stationary phase particles without the use of probe molecules. ne accumulation of organic modifiers in the stationary phase can be quantified, and the environment of the modifier in the stationary phase can be determined. Specifically, we have investigated the interactions of acetonitrile with C-18-functionalized silica particles using confocal Raman microscopy, which enables the sampling of small (similar to 1 fL) volumes within individual 10 mu m particles. Bare chromatographic silica was also studied in order to investigate the interactions of acetonitrile with surface silanols. ne nittile-stretching (VCN) frequency of acetonitrile responds sensitively to the dipolarity of its local microenvironment. The populations of solution-phase and interfacial acetonitrile are thus spectroscopically distinguishable. Scattering from VCN shows contributions from three different environments within a single RPLC chromatographic particle: acetonitrile in the interparticle mobile phase, C-18-chain associated acetonittile, and acetonitrile that is interacting with residual surface silanols. Data are presented quantifying these populations and characterizing their environments within single stationary phase particles.

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