Monday, May 25, 2009

HPLC - Column

There are various columns that are secondary to the separating column or stationary phase. They are: Guard, Derivatizing, Capillary, Fast, and Preparatory Columns.
Guard Columns are placed anterior to the separating column. This serves as a protective factor that prolongs the life and usefulness of the separation column. They are dependable columns designed to filter or remove: 1) particles that clog the separation column; 2) compounds and ions that could ultimately cause "baseline drift", decreased resolution, decreased sensitivity, and create false peaks; 3) compounds that may cause precipitation upon contact with the stationary or mobile phase; and 4) compounds that might co-elute and cause extraneous peaks and interfere with detection and/or quantification. These columns must be changed on a regular basis in order to optimize their protective function. Size of the packing varies with the type of protection needed.
Derivatizing Columns- Pre- or post-primary column derivatization can be an important aspect of the sample analysis. Reducing or altering the parent compound to a chemically related daughter molecule or fragment elicits potentially tangible data which may complement other results or prior analysis. In few cases, the derivatization step can serve to cause data to become questionable, which is one reason why HPLC was advantageous over gas chromatography, or GC (brown-1990). Because GC requires volatile, thermally stabile, or nonpolar analytes, derivatization was usually required for those samples which did not contain these properties. Acetylation, silylation, or concentrated acid hydrolysis are a few derivatization techniques.
Capillary Columns- Advances in HPLC led to smaller analytical columns. Also known as microcolumns, capillary columns have a diameter much less than a millimeter and there are three types: open-tubular, partially packed, and tightly packed. They allow the user to work with nanoliter sample volumes, decreased flow rate, and decreased solvent volume usage which may lead to cost effectiveness. However, most conditions and instrumentation must be miniaturized, flow rate can be difficult to reproduce, gradient elution is not as efficient, and care must be taken when loading minute sample volumes.
Microbore and small-bore columns are also used for analytical and small volumes assays. A typical diameter for a small-bore column is 1-2 mm.
Like capillary columns, instruments must usually be modified to accommodate these smaller capacity columns (i.e., decreased flow rate). However, besides the advantage of smaller sample and mobile phase volume, there is a noted increase in mass sensitivity without significant loss in resolution (simpson -1987). --Capillary Electrophoresis
Fast Columns- One of the primary reasons for using these columns is to obtain improved sample throughput (amount of compound per unit time). For many columns, increasing the flow or migration rate through the stationary phase will adversely affect the resolution and separation. Therefore, fast columns are designed to decrease time of the chromatographic analysis without forsaking significant deviations in results. These columns have the same internal diameter but much shorter length than most other columns, and they are packed with smaller particles that are typically 3 µm in diameter. Advantages include increased sensitivity, decreased analysis time, decreased mobile phase usage, and increased reproducibility (DiCesare-1987).
Preparatory Columns- These columns are utilized when the objective is to prepare bulk (milligrams) of sample for laboratory preparatory applications. A preparatory column usually has a large column diameter which is designed to facilitate large volume injections into the HPLC system.
Accessories important to mention are the back-pressure regulator and the fraction collector. The back-pressure regulator is placed immediately posterior to the HPLC detector. It is designed to apply constant pressure to the detector outlet which prevents the formation of air bubbles within the system.
This, in turn, improves chromatographic baseline stability. It is usually devised to operate regardless of flow rate, mobile phase, or viscosity.The fraction collector is an automated device that collects uniform increments of the HPLC output.
Vials are placed in the carousel and the user programs the time interval in which the machine is to collect each fraction. Each vial contains mobile phase and sample fractions at the corresponding time of elution. Packings for columns are diverse since there are many modes of HPLC.
They are available in different sizes, diameters, pore sizes, or they can have special materials attached (such as an antigen or antibody for immunoaffinity chromatography).
Packings available range from those needed for specific applications (affinity, immunoaffinity, chiral, biological, etc.) to those for all-purpose applications.
The packings are attached to the internal column hull by resins or supports, which include oxides, polymers, carbon, hydroxyapatite beads, agarose, or silica, the most common type (brown-1990).

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