| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1169567 | Analytica Chimica Acta | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Aluminum oxide activated by heating to 350-400 °C retains n-alkanes with more than about 20 carbon atoms, whereas iso-alkanes largely pass the column non-retained. Retention of n-alkanes is strong with n-pentane or n-hexane as mobile phase, but weak or negligible with cyclohexane or iso-octane. It is strongly reduced with increasing column temperature. Even small amounts of polar components, such as modifiers or impurities in the mobile phase, cause the retention of n-alkanes to irreversibly collapse. Since n-alkanes are not more polar than iso-alkanes and long chain n-alkanes not more polar than those of shorter chains, retention by a mechanism based on steric properties is assumed. The sensitivity to deactivation by polar components indicates that polar components and n-alkanes are retained by the same sites. The capacity for retaining n-alkanes is low, with the effect that the retention of n-alkanes depends on the load with retained paraffins. These retention properties are useful for the pre-separation of hydrocarbons in the context of the analysis of mineral oil paraffins in foodstuffs and tissue, where plant n-alkanes, typically ranging from C23 to C33, may severely disturb the analysis (subject of Part II).
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Katell Fiselier, Dennis Fiorini, Koni Grob,
