| Literature DB >> 24679408 |
Agnès Le Masle1, David Angot2, Cécile Gouin1, Amélie D'Attoma2, Jérémie Ponthus1, Alain Quignard1, Sabine Heinisch3.
Abstract
Comprehensive on-line two-dimensional liquid chromatography (on-line LC × LC) was used for the characterization of bio-oils obtained by fast pyrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass. The resulting bio-oil contains a large number of oxygenated chemical families and must therefore be upgraded before being used as drop-in transportation biofuels. The good knowledge of its complex composition is essential for optimizing the mandatory bio-oil upgrading process to biofuels, thereby requiring powerful separation techniques designed to be hyphenated to mass spectrometry detection (LC × LC-MS). In this study, reversed phase conditions were optimized in both dimensions for the RPLC × RPLC separation of the aqueous fraction of bio-oils. The first step of method development consisted in searching for a suitable set of RP-conditions via the screening of a large number of RP-systems (made up of different stationary phases and/or mobile phases and/or temperature). The practical peak capacity and the degree of orthogonality were calculated for a sample of 38 representative compounds, both descriptors having been considered as selection criterion. Two different couplings were chosen and evaluated for the RPLC × RPLC separation of the 38 representative compounds. The best of both, in terms of real practical peak capacity, was further successfully applied to the separation of the aqueous phase of a partially dehydroxygenated bio-oil.Entities:
Keywords: Bio-oil; Biomass; Practical peak capacity; RPLC×RPLC; Two-dimensional liquid chromatography
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24679408 DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2014.03.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chromatogr A ISSN: 0021-9673 Impact factor: 4.759