Comparison by capillary SFC and SFC-MS of soxhlet and supercritical fluid extraction of hamster feces
β Scribed by Pinkston, J. David ;Delaney, Thomas E. ;Bowling, Donald J. ;Chester, Thomas L.
- Book ID
- 102894074
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 568 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0935-6304
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Components of hamster feces ranging from low molecular weight fatty acids through the expected range of triglycerides have been eluted in a single SFC run with simultaneous pressure and temperature programming. Temperature programming from 140Β°C to 240Β°C was required to provide optimum conditions for separation of the fatty acids and to move the elution region of the sterol esters away from that of the triglycerides. Data from chemical ionization and electron impact mass spectrometry of compounds separated by SFC were used to confirm identities suggested by retention measurements and to provide tentative identities of unknown compounds.
SFC with flame ionization detection was used to compare Soxhlet extraction, offβline supercritical fluid extraction (SFE), and onβline SFE of the feces. Although samples obtained by Soxhlet extraction and SFE produced very similar chromatograms, SFE required far less time and consumed much smaller quantities of organic solvent.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Waxes play an indispensable role in the formulation of modern cosmetics. Quantitative measurement of the level of different waxes in cosmetics is essential to the understanding of the performance characteristics of the cosmetics. Conventionally, waxes in cosmetics are extracted by Soxhlet extraction