A new polymer, polymethacryloxypropylhydrosiloxane PMAHS , has been developed and used as both a deactivating layer and an intermediate layer for stable coating of an uncharged polymer on fused silica capillaries in capillary electrophoresis. The deactivation procedure is based on a siliconhydride d
Simple method for the preparation of highly efficient polymer-coated capillary electrophoresis columns
✍ Scribed by Abdul Malik; Zhongxi Zhao; Milton L. Lee
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 525 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1040-7685
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
A simple method for the preparation of polymer‐coated fused silica capillary columns for electrophoresis is presented. It is shown that the static coating technique used in GC and SFC can be conveniently utilized for the preparation of highly efficient capillary electrophoresis columns. In this method, the coating solution contains appropriate proportions of three ingredients: a polymer, a surface derivatization reagent, and a crosslinking reagent dissolved in a suitable low‐boiling solvent. After coating, the column is subjected to heat treatment to immobilize the polymer film. Simplicity, rapidity, high column efficiency, batch‐to‐batch and run‐to‐run reproducibility, and long column life‐time are advantageous features of the new method. Column efficiencies of as high as 1.2 million theoretical plates were achieved for cytochrome c on a 96 cm long Ucon 75 H‐90,000 coated column. Efficient electrophoretic separation of five cytochrome c proteins was achieved on a Superox 4 coated column. The possibility of CE separation of histones on the new columns was also explored.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The approach of forming self‐assembled monolayers on the surface of fused silica capillaries has been evaluated for capillary electrophoresis of proteins. Two polymer matrices (polymerized acrylamide or methacryloyl‐Tris) were successfully grafted on the self‐assembled monolayers, as ev
Dynamic headspace gas chromatography/mass spectrometry has been shown to be an effective yet simple technique for survey of volatiles contained in polymers in this and other work [l]. Thermal analysis mass spectrometry provides further information concerning the association of volatiles on carbon su