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Preparation of amino-zirconia bonded phases and their evaluation in hydrophilic interaction chromatography of carbohydrates with pulsed amperometric detection

✍ Scribed by Yu, Jim ;Rassi, Ziad El


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
668 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
0935-6304

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

A series of non‐porous, microspherical zirconia‐based stationary phases with surface bound amine functionality have been introduced and evaluated in hydrophilic interaction chromatography (HILIC) of underivatized, neutral carbohydrates and anion exchange chromatography of nucleotides using pulsed amperometric detection and ultraviolet detection, respectively. Three aminopropyl alkoxysilane compounds were used in the surface modification of the non‐porous zirconia support, namely 3‐aminopropyltrimethoxysilane (monoamine), N‐(2‐aminoethyl)‐3‐aminopropyltrimethoxysilane (diamine), and trimethoxysilylpropyldiethylenetriamine (triamine). Due to the relatively low specific surface area of the non‐porous zirconia support used in this study (ca. 7.3 m^2^/g), zirconia with surface coating of the triamine type yielded the best results as far as the separations of chitooligosaccharides and maltooligosaccharides are concerned. Since a non‐porous zirconia could be readily modified with amine functionality via ZrOSi bonds, it is expected that all the three aminopropyl alkoxysilane compounds would yield satisfactory results with porous zirconia microparticles because of their much higher specific surface areas. Although the non‐porous zirconia exhibited some limitations, the present study has demonstrated that microspherical zirconia particles are suitable supports for the production of polar sorbents for HILIC of carbohydrates. Another surface modification, which involved the activation of the zirconia surface with aldehyde groups followed by reductive amination with tetraethylenepentamine, was also evaluated. Although this chemistry would in principle yield sorbents with higher concentration in amine groups, the conversion of the majority of the primary amine groups of the tetraethyle‐nepetamine molecules to secondary amine functions in the course of the reductive amination reaction have provided a stationary phase that did not afford satisfactory resolution for carbohydrates. However, this same stationary phase behaved as a weak anion exchanger and allowed the high resolution separation of nucleoside‐5′‐mono‐, ‐di‐, and triphosphates. Overall, the results obtained with zirconia‐based hydrophilic sorbents paralleled those obtained on amino‐silica bonded phases.