Literature DB >> 16615799

Results with an apparatus for pressurized planar electrochromatography.

Allyson L Novotny1, David Nurok, Randall W Replogle, Gregory L Hawkins, Robert E Santini.   

Abstract

Pressurized planar electrochromatography (PPEC) is a fast and efficient planar chromatographic technique. The mobile phase is driven by electroosmotic flow, while the system is pressurized in a manner that allows heat to flow between the sorbent layer and the pressurizing medium. The reproducibility of solute retention was not satisfactory in the initial report describing PPEC. In the current report, this reproducibility is improved by better control of several experimental variables. The pressure at which PPEC is performed is now free of drift, and the temperature at which the layer is preconditioned is maintained to within +/-1 degrees C. The best reproducibility of retention is obtained when the plate is soaked in the mobile phase for a defined time before each run. In the original prototype, the temperature of the sorbent layer was not controlled. In the present apparatus, water, at a constant temperature between 3 and 60 degrees C, is circulated through channels in the two die blocks that pressurize the layer. The highest efficiency is obtained at an intermediate temperature. This behavior is ascribed to high resistance to mass transfer at the lower temperatures and increased diffusion at higher temperatures. Efficiency, as measured by the number of theoretical plates, increases with increasing migration distance. The height equivalent of a theoretical plate diminishes with increasing migration distance, and values as low as 0.0106 mm are obtained under appropriate conditions. This extrapolates to 94 000 plates/m. Manual spotting was used in this report. Evidence is presented that substantially better efficiency would be obtained if the initial spot size were smaller. The efficiency of PPEC in its current form is illustrated by a chromatogram showing the separation of nine solutes in 2 min. PPEC was also performed with TLC plates in a back-to-back configuration, and this doubles the number of samples that can be simultaneously separated.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16615799     DOI: 10.1021/ac052262v

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  3 in total

1.  A Modified Device for Pressurized Planar Electrochromatography and Preliminary Results with On-Line Sample Application.

Authors:  Aneta Hałka-Grysińska; Piotr Slązak; Andrzej Torbicz; Mieczysław Sajewicz; Tadeusz H Dzido
Journal:  Chromatographia       Date:  2013-03-05       Impact factor: 2.044

2.  Influence of the Modifier Type and its Concentration on Electroosmotic Flow of the Mobile Phase in Pressurized Planar Electrochromatography.

Authors:  Aneta Hałka-Grysińska; Paweł W Płocharz; Andrzej Torbicz; Ewa Skwarek; Władysław Janusz; Tadeusz H Dzido
Journal:  Chromatographia       Date:  2014-06-01       Impact factor: 2.044

3.  Comparison of Phenolic Compound Separations by HPTLC and PPEC with SDS as the Mobile Phase Component.

Authors:  Beata Polak; Adam Traczuk; Marta Kamińska; Małgorzata Kozyra
Journal:  J Anal Methods Chem       Date:  2019-01-10       Impact factor: 2.193

  3 in total

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