## Abstract In a drug development program improved speed of the development phase is constantly being explored. But much effort and time is usually expended in finding suitable methods for pharmaceutical and biomedical analyses. In contrast, a mathematical model has been presented here to correlate
Capillary electrophoresis of anionic analytes in methanol: Effect of counter-ions on electrophoretic mobility
β Scribed by Simo P. Porras; Marja-Liisa Riekkola; Ernst Kenndler
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 668 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0173-0835
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Mobilities of 11 substituted benzoates and 3 nitrophenolates were determined in nonaqueous methanol with Li + , Na + , K + , Rb + , and tetrabutylammonium (Bu 4 N + ) as counterions of the background electrolyte. The influence of the ionic concentration of the background electrolyte on the mobility of the analyte anions is more pronounced compared to aqueous solutions. The deviation from the dependence of the mobilities on the ionic strength from the Debye-HΓΌckel-Onsager theory indicates the occurrence of ion-pair formation. For a given ion concentration (10 mmol/L), the decrease of the analyte mobility follows the counter-ion sequence Li + , Na + , K + , Rb + , which is the inverse order of their Stokes radii. Bu 4 N + as counter-ion has a similar effect on the analyte mobility than Li + (which has the same Stokes radius, but a six times smaller crystal radius). Exceptions are some di-and trihydroxybenzoates. The mobilities in methanol and in water with the same counter-ion (Na + ) at a given ionic concentration show very low correlation.
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