## Abstract With uncoated fused silica capillaries, the electroosmotic flow and its contribution to solute migration are in part responsible for problems with the reproducibility of migration time due to hysteresis effects. In transferring coating procedures from silica to capillary surfaces, it ha
Charged surface coatings for capillary electrophoresis
✍ Scribed by Mingxian Huang; Guoliang Yi; Jerald S. Bradshaw; Milton L. Lee
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 481 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1040-7685
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Fused‐silica capillaries with specially designed charged surface coatings were developed for the control of electroosmotic flow and for the separation of peptides and proteins in capillary electrophoresis. Cryptand moieties were immobilized onto the capillary surface through a crosslinking reaction of a cryptand‐containing polymer and copolymerization of a cryptand‐containing monomer. The resultant coatings provided switchable electroosmotic flow from low to high pH due to the complexing ability of the cryptand moieties with the metal ions from the buffer solution. A positively charged quaternary amine surface‐coated column was found to be very effective in reversing the electroosmotic flow compared to an untreated fused silica capillary, and to be suitable for separation of proteins whose pI values are greater than the buffer pH. Also, a negatively charged sulfonic acid surface‐coated column could be used to stabilize the electroosmotic flow from pH 3 to 9, and the magnitude of the electroosmotic flow could be controlled by varying the concentration of sulfonic acid groups in the coating solution. This negatively charged surface coating gave excellent reproducibility for the separation of a tryptic digest of β‐casein.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract A new application of the polymeric ionic liquid (PIL) in capillary electrophoresis is reported. Poly(1‐vinyl‐3‐butylimidazolium bromide) was physically adsorbed on silica capillary as the simple and effective coating for capillary electrophoresis (CE) analysis, in which the PIL is not p