Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7612290 | Journal of Chromatography A | 2014 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
In HPLC, injection of solvents that differ from the eluent can result in peak broadening due to solvent strength mismatch or viscous fingering. Broadened, distorted or even split analyte peaks may result. Past studies of this injection-induced peak distortion in reversed phase (RPLC) and hydrophilic interaction (HILIC) liquid chromatography have led to the conclusion that the sample should be injected in the eluent or a weaker solvent. However, there have been no studies of injection-induced peak distortion in ion chromatography (IC). To address this, injection-induced effects were studied for six inorganic anions (Fâ, Clâ, NO2â, Brâ, NO3â and SO42â) on a Dionex AS23 IC column using a HCO3â/CO32â eluent. The VanMiddlesworth-Dorsey injection sensitivity parameter (s) showed that IC of anions has much greater tolerance to the injection matrix (HCO3â/CO32â herein) mismatch than RPLC or HILIC. Even when the injection contained a ten-fold greater concentration of HCO3â/CO32â than the eluent, the peak shapes and separation efficiencies of six analyte ions did not change significantly. At more than ten-fold greater matrix concentrations, analyte anions that elute near the system peak of the matrix were distorted, and in the extreme cases exhibited a small secondary peak on the analyte peak front. These studies better guide the degree of dilution needed prior to IC analysis of anions.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Ya Zhang, Charles A. Lucy,