Method of analysis of a selected group of pyrethroids in soil samples using off-line flowthrough extraction and on-column direct largevolume injection in reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography An analytical method using flow-through extraction of a soil sample filled in a short HPLC c
Analyte solvent and injection volume as variables affecting method development in semipreparative reversed-phase liquid chromatography
✍ Scribed by Edward S. Kozlowski; Richard A. Dalterio
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 772 KB
- Volume
- 30
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1615-9306
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Analyte solvent and injection volume were examined as parameters that affect peak elution during method development for semipreparative RP HPLC purification. Analytical and semipreparative scale HPLC with gradient elution were used to analyze a mixture of three standard compounds with significantly different retention factors (k). This mixture was analyzed after (i) dissolution in solvents of varied compositions, and (ii) with progressively larger injection volumes. As analyte solvent composition and injection volume were changed, the most notable effects on peak shape were observed for the compounds with the smallest k values. Overall changes in peak shape were less pronounced when analyte solvent composition was similar to the starting mobile phase regardless of injection volume. Scale‐up to semipreparative conditions yielded results consistent with those observed at the analytical scale. These data show that peak shape is greatly affected by analyte solvent composition and injection volume, and that these effects can be ameliorated by the dissolution of analytes in solvent that closely resembles that of the mobile phase used for initial run conditions. The following study addresses the concepts of peak elution in RP HPLC and how they factor into semipreparative purification.
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