Ternary mobile phases in adsorption thin-layer chromatography \*' In thin-layer chromatography multi-component solvent systems are generally used as mobile phases due to their adsorptive capacity for the substances being separated. Establishing an optimal chromatography system and the separation of
Adsorption model for retention in normal-phase liquid chromatography with ternary mobile phases
✍ Scribed by Małgorzata Borówko; Barbara Ościk-Mendyk
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 224 KB
- Volume
- 118
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0001-8686
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✦ Synopsis
The review gives a link between the theory of adsorption from multicomponent solutions and liquid chromatography. The article surveys the methods developed to describe the retention in normal-phase chromatography with ternary mobile phases with emphasis on the results of the authors. In the model used the driving force for the separation is the difference in adsorption of a solute and all solvents onto the solid surface. The general equation generates a series of simple linear relationships to predict the retention factor in ternary mobile phase for which certain parameters remain fixed. Theoretical concepts are tested by comparison with experimental data. The correlations between parameters characterizing retention in ternary, binary and pure solvents are discussed.
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This paper describes the theory of liquid adsorption chromatography (LSC) with mixed mobile phase, involving formation of multilayer surface phases. An equation describing the dependence of the capacity ratio upon the mobile phase composition is derived and theoretical curves illustrating the same d
## Abstract Quantitative Structure‐Retention Relationships (QSRRs) have been employed to study retention mechanism of Reversed‐Phase Liquid Chromatography (RPLC). Two C~18~ and two C~8~ columns were used with mobile phases containing methanol, acetonitrile, and tetrahydrofuran in concentrations ran