4.6 Article

Quantitative analysis and synthesis of the electrokinetic mass transport and adsorption mechanisms of a charged adsorbate in capillary electrochromatography systems employing charged adsorbent particles

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY A
Volume 919, Issue 1, Pages 157-179

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0021-9673(01)00789-0

Keywords

electroosmotic flow; electrophoretic migration; electrochromatography; adsorption; charged adsorbate; charged particles

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The dynamic mathematical model of Grimes and Liapis [J. Colloid Interf. Sci. 234 (2001) 223] for capillary electrochromatography (CEC) systems operated under frontal chromatography conditions is extended to accommodate conditions in CEC systems where a positively charged analyte is introduced into a packed capillary column by a pulse injection (analytical mode of operation) in order to determine quantitatively the electroosmotic velocity, electrostatic potential and concentration profiles of the charged species in the double layer and in the electroneutral core region of the fluid in the interstitial channels for bulk flow in the packed chromatographic column as the adsorbate adsorbs onto the negatively charged fixed sites on the surface of the non-porous particles packed in the chromatographic column. Furthermore, certain key parameters are identified for both the frontal and analytical operational modes that characterize the performance of CEC systems. The results obtained from model simulations for CEC systems employing the analytical mode of operation indicate that: (a) for a given mobile liquid phase, the charged particles should have the smallest diameter, d(p), possible that still provides conditions for a plug-flow electroosmotic velocity field in the interstitial channels for bulk flow and a large negative surface charge density, delta (0), in order to prevent overloading conditions; (b) sharp, highly resolute adsorption zones can be obtained when the value of the parameter gamma (2,min), which represents the ratio of the electroosmotic velocity of the mobile liquid phase under unretained conditions to the electrophoretic velocity of the anions (0 > gamma (2,min)> -1), is very close to negative one, but the rate at which the solute band propagates through the column is slow; furthermore, as the solute band propagates across larger axial lengths, the desorption zone becomes more dispersed relative to the adsorption zone especially when the value of the parameter gamma (2,max), which represents the ratio of the electroosmotic velocity of the mobile liquid phase under retained conditions to the electrophoretic velocity of the anions (0>gamma (2,max)>-1), is significantly greater than gamma (2,min); (c) when the value of the equilibrium adsorption constant, K-A,K-3, is low, very sharp, highly resolved adsorption and desorption zones of the solute band can be obtained as well as fast rates of propagation of the solute band through the column; (d) sharp adsorption zones and fast propagation of the solute band can be obtained if the value of the mobility, nu (3) of the analyte is high and the value of the ratio nu (1)/nu (3), where nu (1) represents the mobility of the cation, is low; however, if the magnitude of the mobility, nu (3), of the analyte is small, dispersed desorption zones are obtained with slower rates of propagation of the solute band through the column; (e) good separation of analyte molecules having similar mobilities and different adsorption affinities can be obtained in short operational times with a very small column length, L, and the resolution can be increased by providing values of gamma (2,min) and gamma (2,max) that are very close to negative one; and (f) the change in the magnitude of the axial current density, i(x), across the solute band could serve as a measurement for the rate of propagation of the solute band. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available