Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7613133 | Journal of Chromatography A | 2014 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Comprehensive on-line two-dimensional liquid chromatography (on-line LCÂ ÃÂ LC) was used for the characterization of bio-oils obtained by fast pyrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass. The resulting bio-oil contains a large number of oxygenated chemical families and must therefore be upgraded before being used as drop-in transportation biofuels. The good knowledge of its complex composition is essential for optimizing the mandatory bio-oil upgrading process to biofuels, thereby requiring powerful separation techniques designed to be hyphenated to mass spectrometry detection (LCÂ ÃÂ LC-MS). In this study, reversed phase conditions were optimized in both dimensions for the RPLCÂ ÃÂ RPLC separation of the aqueous fraction of bio-oils. The first step of method development consisted in searching for a suitable set of RP-conditions via the screening of a large number of RP-systems (made up of different stationary phases and/or mobile phases and/or temperature). The practical peak capacity and the degree of orthogonality were calculated for a sample of 38 representative compounds, both descriptors having been considered as selection criterion. Two different couplings were chosen and evaluated for the RPLCÂ ÃÂ RPLC separation of the 38 representative compounds. The best of both, in terms of real practical peak capacity, was further successfully applied to the separation of the aqueous phase of a partially dehydroxygenated bio-oil.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Agnès Le Masle, David Angot, Cécile Gouin, Amélie D'Attoma, Jérémie Ponthus, Alain Quignard, Sabine Heinisch,