| Literature DB >> 10839133 |
M S Bellini1, G Manetto, Z Deyl, F Tagliaro, I Miksík.
Abstract
The effect of lower organic alcohols as co-surfactants (methanol, ethanol, n-propanol, isopropanol, propanediol, n-butanol and isoamylalcohol) and n-hexane as an organic modifier in 12.5 mol/l phosphate buffer with varying SDS concentration was investigated using a set of vitamins and p-hydroxybenzoic acid as the test mixture. It was demonstrated that optimum separations can be achieved particularly at high concentrations of the surfactant; the selectivity can be changed by adding a co-surfactant; while propanol and isopropanol show the same properties as co-surfactants, the most efficient alcohols were isoamylalcohol and propanediol. n-Butanol was capable of selective separation of p-hydroxybenzoic acid in the test mixture. Addition of ethanol appears most effective at higher concentrations (while all the other alcohols are effective already at 5% concentration, the best results with ethanol were obtained when it constituted 20% of the background electrolyte). 5% Concentration of methanol resulted in poor separation of the test mixture, however if 300 microl/10 ml of hexane were added to 20 mmol/l SDS containing phosphate buffer, the resulting separation was practically the same as with 50 mmol/l SDS.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10839133 DOI: 10.1016/s0378-4347(99)00382-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chromatogr B Biomed Sci Appl ISSN: 1387-2273