
Chromatography
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"Mark Vitha has written a book that will appeal to students, teachers, and perhaps professional analysts who need a refresher in the fundamentals of chromatography. The book consists of three sections of about equal length dealing with separation theory, gas chromatography (GC), and liquid chromatography (LC). The section on theory is especially strong. Vitha is an experienced educator who understands the undergraduate audience and explains concepts clearly. He uses analogies to help students with abstract ideas, something I have seen little of in the sciences. He also freely uses ideas and terms from thermodynamics that can be grasped by students who have studied physical chemistry". "Graduate students might want to use this book, with additional depth provided by their instructors and current and classic papers (many are referenced). Graduate students need more depth in areas such as solvent theory and the selection of solvents, for example, than is given in this book". "I taught instrumental methods to undergraduate students for many years using encyclopedic full-course texts. I wish there had been as fine a pedagogical tool as this more-focused new textbook at that time". (LC/GC- December 16)More details
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CHAPTER 1
Many "real-world" samples are mixtures of dozens, hundreds, or thousands of chemicals. For example, medication, gasoline, blood, cosmetics, and food products are all complex mixtures. Common analyses of such samples include quantifying the levels of drugs - both legal and illegal - in blood, identifying the components of gasoline as part of an arson investigation, and measuring pesticide levels in food.
FUNDAMENTALS OF CHROMATOGRAPHY
Chromatography is a technique that separates the individual components in a complex mixture. Fundamental intermolecular interactions such as dispersion, hydrogen bonding, and dipole-dipole forces govern the separations. Once separated, the solutes can also be identified and quantified. Because of its ability to separate, quantify, and identify components, chromatography is one of the most important instrumental methods of analysis, both in terms of the number of instruments worldwide and the number of analyses conducted every day.
1.1 THEORY
Chromatography separates components in a sample by introducing a small volume of the sample at the start, or head, of a column. A mobile phase, either gas or liquid, is also introduced at the head of the column. When the mobile phase is a gas, the technique is referred to as gas chromatography (GC) and when it is a liquid, the technique is called liquid chromatography (LC). Unlike the sample, which is injected as a discrete volume, the mobile phase flows continuously through the column. It serves to push the molecules in the sample through the column so that they emerge, or "elute" from the other end.
Two particular modes of LC and GC, known as reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) and capillary gas chromatography, account for approximately 85% of all chromatographic analyses performed each day. Therefore, we focus on these two techniques here and leave discussions of specific variations to the chapters that describe LC and GC in greater detail.
In GC, the mobile phase, which is typically He, N2, or H2 gas, is delivered from a high-pressure gas tank. The gas flows through the column toward the low-pressure end. The column contains a stationary phase. In capillary GC, the stationary phase is typically a polymer film that is 0.25-5 µm thick (see Figure 1.1a). It is coated on the interior walls of a fused silica capillary column with an inner diameter of approximately 0.5 mm or smaller. The column is usually 10-60 m (30-180 ft) long.
Figure 1.1 Representations of typical capillary gas (a) and liquid (b) chromatography columns. Figure (c) is a depiction of a cross section of a porous particle (shaded areas represent the solid support particles, white areas are the pores, and the squiggles on the surface are bonded alkyl chains. Figure (d) is an scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of actual 3 µm liquid chromatography porous particles. Note that the lines across the particle diameters have been added to the image and are not actually part of particles. (Source: Alon McCormick and Peter Carr. Reproduced with permission of U of MN.). It is worth taking time to note the different dimensions involved. For the GC columns, they range from microns (10-6 m) for the thickness of the stationary phase, to millimeters (10-3 m) for the column diameter, up to tens of meters for the column length. Note also that LC columns are typically much shorter than GC columns (centimeter versus meter).
RPLC is the most common mode of liquid chromatography. In RPLC, the mobile phase is a solvent mixture such as water with acetonitrile (CH3CN) that is forced through the column using high-pressure pumps. The column is typically made of stainless steel, has an inner diameter of 4.6 mm or smaller, and is only 20-250 mm (1-10 in.) in length (see Figure 1.1b). However, unlike most GC columns, most LC columns are packed with tiny spherical particles approximately 5 µm in diameter or smaller, as shown in Figure 1.1c and d. When rubbed between your fingers, the particles feel like talc or other fine powders. The particles are not completely solid, but rather are highly porous, with thousands of pores in each particle. The pores create cavities akin to caves within the particle. The pores create a large amount of surface area inside the particles. A stationary phase, typically an alkyl chain 18 carbon atoms long, is bonded to the surface of these pores. A more specific discussion of the important aspects of these particles, and variations in the kinds of stationary phases bonded to them, is provided in Chapter 3. For now, it is simply important to have an image of a stainless steel column packed with very fine porous particles that have an organic-like layer bonded to the surface of the pores.
Some of the important RPLC and capillary GC column characteristics are summarized in Table 1.1. We also point out here that a chromatographic analysis is conducted with an instrument called a chromatograph and results in a chromatogram, which is a plot of the detector's response versus time (see Figure 1.2). Subsequent sections describe how retention and separation of molecules are quantified.
Table 1.1 Common RPLC and GC Characteristics
RPLC GC (open tubular) Column construction Stainless steel Quartz with a polyimide coating Column length 20-250 mm 10-60 m Column inner diameter 2.1- 4.6 mm 0.1-0.5 mm Particle composition Porous silica (SiO2) particles No particles - open tube Particle size 1.8-5 µm No particles - open tube Mobile phase Solvent mixture (e.g., water mixed with acetonitrile) He, N2, or H2 Stationary phase location Alkyl chains (C-8 and C-18) bonded to particle surface Liquid-like polymer film bonded to capillary walls Stationary phase chemistry Relatively nonpolar and organic in nature Polysiloxane polymer derivatized with organic moietiesFigure 1.2 An example of a chromatogram - a plot of signal versus time - measured using a chromatograph (the instrument). Each peak represents a different solute that emerges from the column at a different time than the others. The peak width and height are related to the amount of each solute present.
1.1.1 Component Separation
Different types of molecules are separated within the column because they have different strengths of intermolecular interactions with the mobile and stationary phases. To help understand chromatographic separations, we first use a simplified model of liquid chromatography with water as the mobile phase and octane (C8H18) as the stationary phase. Imagine that a mixture of toluene and phenol is introduced as solutes into the mobile phase as depicted in Figure 1.3.
Figure 1.3 This figure depicts the behavior of phenol and toluene (solutes) partitioning between water and octane (bulk solvents). The water and octane serve as models for the mobile and stationary phases, respectively, in liquid chromatography. The left image depicts the system right after solutes are added to the aqueous phase before equilibrium is established. Once equilibrium is established (right), more toluene than phenol partitions into the nonpolar octane phase. Similarly, more phenol resides in the water due to hydrogen bonding and dipole-dipole interactions.
In this static image, given enough time, the solute molecules diffuse through the water and into the octane. They eventually reach equilibrium, being distributed to different extents between the water (mobile) and octane (stationary) phases. This equilibrium process is described in Equation 1.1
1.1with the associated equilibrium constant
1.2where "A" represents a specific analyte such as phenol or toluene, and K, by IUPAC definition, is known as the distribution constant. Many chromatographers refer to it as the partition coefficient or distribution coefficient. We will treat all of these as synonymous in this and the following chapters.
Because phenol is more polar than toluene and capable of hydrogen bonding with water, it does not partition into the octane to the extent that the toluene does. When looked at from a temporal perspective, phenol molecules spend less time in the octane, on average, than do the toluene molecules, which are attracted to the octane by dispersion interactions. It is important to understand that phenol is also attracted to the octane by dispersion interactions, and in fact, toluene is attracted to water through dispersion and dipole-induced dipole interactions. However, because phenol can participate in dipole-dipole and hydrogen-bonding interactions with water, and toluene cannot, phenol has a greater affinity for the aqueous phase than does toluene. As a consequence, phenol stays in the water more and partitions less into the stationary phase than does toluene.
It is clear from Figure 1.3 that what was once a mixture of an equal number of...
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