Think of your typical porous bare silica support as a big sponge full of holes. All of those holes (pores) are where the sample will migrate through before emerging out the other side. With conventional chromatography supports, most of the interaction takes place inside the particle, not on the surface. The size and number of these openings relate to retention time. Besides particle size (particle diameter), pore size is one of the most important characteristics of silica based chromatography supports.
The pore size or pore diameter is often expressed in Angstroms (i.e. 80 A = 8 nm). The degree of porosity relates to the hydrodynamic volume of your sample and is inversely related to the surface area of the support. The larger the surface area of the support (smaller pore size), the longer the possible retention of the sample. For small drug molecule samples under 1,000 daltons (an estimate only) we often use high surface area supports with small pore sizes between 60 and 150 Angstroms (~ 200 to 500 square meters per gram). These provide high retention characteristics useful in separating apart many small compounds in one analysis run. For larger molecules (i.e. peptides and proteins), we employ supports with larger pore sizes (~300 Angstroms). Particles with small pores have larger surface areas which can provide more interaction with the sample. Note: Pore size is often determined using the BET Nitrogen adsorption/desorption equation. Due to endcapping of the support (e.g. C8 or C18), the actual value obtained is often 20-30% less than the original value.
When comparing
bare silica columns or trying to identify similar conventional columns for use in a method, pore size must be considered. Manufacturer's publish the pore size in Angstroms (*sometimes in nm) for their different supports. Choosing columns with similar pore sizes is just one of many parameters needed to provide similar retention characteristics.
The HPLC "Hints and Tips" found here will be of interest to anyone performing HPLC, UHPLC (UPLC), LC/MS, SFC, CE or GC analysis. Many of these free tips, taken from professional classes that I teach, discuss fundamental to advanced level chromatography concepts in a practical way. Occasionally, I will also include laboratory computer related tips here too. Please "follow" this blog to receive updates of new posts. Hint: Type keywords into the SEARCH bar to quickly find other articles.
Translator for HPLC HINTS and TIPS for Chromatographers
Saturday, December 20, 2014
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Syringe Filter Selection for HPLC or LC/MS samples
This article will address the use of disposable female, Luer-compatible,
syringe filters without built-in pre-filters for the filtration of individual samples
into vials for HPLC or LC/MS analysis. - Note: 96 or 384 multi-well filtering
plates provide for a better solution when large quantities of samples need to
be filtered. Note: The presented filter membrane material selection criteria also applies to mobile phase filtration too.
The choice of syringe filter depends on the: filter size (volume)
of your sample, the chemical compatibility of the housing and
membrane and desired pore size. Selection of the wrong filter size can result in too much sample
holdup volume (loss of sample on filter) or overloading of the filter (allowing
unfiltered material to pass through). If a membrane or housing is chosen which
is not chemically compatible with your solution, then contamination of the sample
or rupture of the assembly can result. Choosing a filter with too large a pore size can result in material passing through it which could clog or contaminate the solution (i.e. plug an HPLC system or result in a loss of sterility of a solution). Protein binding affinity is another
characteristic of filter membranes and if you are filtering samples of
biological interest, then you will also want to consider this specification in
your selection criteria too (though it will not be discussed in this article).
Syringe Filter Size:
Filters are available in a variety
of sizes which are generally in a disc shape and described by their diameter.
Common sizes available for chromatography samples include: 3 mm, 4 mm, 13 mm and 25 mm (~25 - 30 mm)
diameter discs. The larger the diameter of the disc, the larger the sample
capacity, cross sectional surface area and potential hold-up volume of the
sample on the filter.
Hold-up volume is important because
some of the sample will be retained inside the membrane and/or filter housing. If
too large a filter is selected, samples with small volumes could be lost entirely
in the hold-up volume on the membrane. Smaller filters have lower hold-up volumes. To extract as much sample as possible, be
sure and use a post-filtration air purge to reduce the total hold-up volume.
If the volume of the sample you
wish to filter is under 1 ml, then a 3 mm filter may provide the lowest hold-up
volume and require the smallest amount of solution. To filter samples between
1 ml and 10 ml, the 13 mm diameter filter provides a good balance between hold-up
volume and large filter surface area. Larger sample volumes from 5 ml to 50 ml
are often filtered through the more common 25 mm diameter filters (~4 times the
filtration area as a 13 mm disc).
Chemical Compatibility:
Membrane Material: This is
where you really must consult the manufacturer’s own documentation for the most
compatible filter membrane for both your sample and the solution that will flow
through the filter. To simplify the selection criteria, we can make some generalizations
about some of the different types available:
Cellulose Acetate (CA): Use
with aqueous solutions and a few hydrocarbons only. Low protein binding so good
for many biological samples. Not compatible with ACN or DMSO. Can be
autoclaved.
Nylon: Great general
purpose material and compatible with many HPLC solvents (including THF,
alcohols, ACN), but not strong acids. Nylon has a high affinity to bind
proteins. Can be autoclaved.
Polysulfone / Polyethersulfone
Variants (PS / PES): Commonly used with tissue culture and ion
chromatography samples. Stable with many strong bases and alcohols, but few
HPLC solvents (as it is hydrophilic). Low backpressure and low protein binding.
Not compatible with ACN. Can be autoclaved.
Polypropylene (PP): General
purpose hydrophilic material with resistance to most acids, bases, DMF, DMSO
and alcohols. Not recommended for use with hydrocarbons, esters or solvents
such as ACN. Can be autoclaved.
Polyvinylidene difluoride
(PVDF): Hydrophilic material with broad compatibility. Often a good choice for use
with alcohols, hydrocarbons, biomolecules, ether and ACN. Low protein binding. Can
be autoclaved.
Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE): Reported in most brochures to be chemically resistant to almost all solvents, strong acids and bases.
Hydrophobic membrane should be pre-wetted when used with aqueous solutions. Low
protein binding and very strong. Can be autoclaved.
Most chromatography grade syringe filters are constructed of either HDPE or PP. These materials are compatible with a wide range of HPLC solvents and both offer low levels of extractables. HDPE has been reported to be more chemically compatible with aqueous basic solutions of NH4OH than PP.
Most chromatography grade syringe filters are constructed of either HDPE or PP. These materials are compatible with a wide range of HPLC solvents and both offer low levels of extractables. HDPE has been reported to be more chemically compatible with aqueous basic solutions of NH4OH than PP.
Pore Size:
This will depend on your application and a number of different pore sizes are commonly available from vendors (1 micron, 0.8, 0.45 and 0.22 micron are the most common):
For example, is sterilization of the fluid the goal? If so, a 0.22 micron filter is generally accepted as the best choice.
For most chromatography or LC-MS applications either a 0.45 or 0.22 micron filters are preferred.
For example, is sterilization of the fluid the goal? If so, a 0.22 micron filter is generally accepted as the best choice.
For most chromatography or LC-MS applications either a 0.45 or 0.22 micron filters are preferred.
Summary:
- Please refer to the various manufacturers data sheets to select an appropriate syringe filter with: (1) a low hold-up volume; (2) large enough size for the volume of sample; (3) which is chemically compatible with the solution and material you are going to inject through it and (4) lowest protein binding affinity (if applicable).
- To reduce the hold-up volume, use a post-filtration air purge to empty the filter.
- Minimize contamination from extractables (in the plastic) by pre-rinsing the filter membrane with some of the clean solution. This can reduce the amount of detectable extractables in your sample. PTFE based membranes have some of the lowest extractable levels so consider their use if this is an issue.
- If analyte binding is a concern, select one of the membranes which has the lowest binding affinity such as PVDF or PTFE.
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Saturday, October 11, 2014
Appropriate Mixer Volume for HPLC and UHPLC Applications
For gradient analysis, most analytical scale HPLC (UHPLC) systems incorporate a solvent mixer which is designed to balance the requirements of moderate dwell volume, low noise and good mixing efficiency. Depending on the method run, the ideal mixer's volume may in fact be completely different than the one installed in your chromatography system. A high-pressure mixing Binary pump can often work well with a slightly lower volume mixer than a low-pressure mixing ternary or quaternary pumping system (because the high pressure mixing gives you a head start), but both pump types benefit from additional mixing.
Here are some general guidelines to help you determine the appropriate mixer volume for your own HPLC system. Note: Since many types of mixer designs exist (static, dynamic, shear...), these are guidelines only. There are some commercially available, high efficiency, low-volume mixers available which can reduce the need for a large volume mixer. Your specific application should be taken into account to determine which size is best.
HPLC System Mixer Volume Choices - Size Matters ("Mixer Volume")
SMALL: Fast or ultrahigh speed separations using low volume, small particle columns. These types of applications depend on a low dwell volume mixer for gradient analysis. To achieve this, your HPLC system should be plumbed with narrow bore capillary tubing (example: 0.005" ID; 0.12mm ID) and include a gradient mixer with a volume of less than 100 ul for low flow rates (example: ~35 ul is rather common size).
LARGE: High Sensitivity Analysis: Gradient analysis where sensitivity is key, benefit from larger volume mixers to minimize contributions of any UV absorbing additives (e.g. TFA) and turbulence in the flow. Traditional 300 to 750 ul mixers often work well in these applications, provided that the column volumes are also large. Smaller column volumes will require smaller mixer volumes to reduce the added dwell effect.
MEDIUM: Routine HPLC Analysis: Typical analytical separations using 3 to 5 mm ID columns (x 100 mm or longer) usually benefit from modest sized mixers within a range of 200 to 400 ul volume. For these applications, I often start with a recommendation to use a mixer which has 10% of the columns volume as a starting point. For a typical 4.6 x 250 mm, 5 micron porous support column, which has about 3 mLs of internal volume, a 300 ul volume mixer usually provides enough mixing volume for routine gradient analysis.
Additional Info:
Back in the 1980's we often related mixer volume to intended flow rate/column dimensions. For example: A mixer size of 25 ul was suggested for 50 ul/min flow rates (commonly used with 1 mm ID columns). A mixer size of 200 ul was suggested for 200 ul/min flow rates (commonly used with 2.1 mm ID columns) and 350 ul mixer volume for 1.000 ml/min flow rates (commonly used with 4.6 mm ID columns). Note: Mixers such as these, with large volumes relative to the column volume contributed to large gradient delay times, but this was, and still is, of less concern for isocratic methods.
As mentioned before, the type of mixer, column volume, flow rate and mobile phase characteristics will help suggest the most applicable volume for your application. When in doubt, select a larger mixer volume for isocratic analysis (less baseline noise, better for gradients) and a smaller one if reducing gradient analysis delay volume is critical.
- Be sure to also consider the volume of any pulse dampener used too as these often have large internal volumes and act as mixers. Some pulse dampeners also incorporate the pressure transducer and/or mixer. These types of combination modules may limit the types of modifications which can be made to optimize the mixing and reduce the dwell volume.
- Don't forget to address the dwell volume contribution of the autosampler, injector loop, interconnecting tubing (extra column volume) and detector flow cell too when optimizing the flow path of your HPLC system.
Here are some general guidelines to help you determine the appropriate mixer volume for your own HPLC system. Note: Since many types of mixer designs exist (static, dynamic, shear...), these are guidelines only. There are some commercially available, high efficiency, low-volume mixers available which can reduce the need for a large volume mixer. Your specific application should be taken into account to determine which size is best.
HPLC System Mixer Volume Choices - Size Matters ("Mixer Volume")
SMALL: Fast or ultrahigh speed separations using low volume, small particle columns. These types of applications depend on a low dwell volume mixer for gradient analysis. To achieve this, your HPLC system should be plumbed with narrow bore capillary tubing (example: 0.005" ID; 0.12mm ID) and include a gradient mixer with a volume of less than 100 ul for low flow rates (example: ~35 ul is rather common size).
LARGE: High Sensitivity Analysis: Gradient analysis where sensitivity is key, benefit from larger volume mixers to minimize contributions of any UV absorbing additives (e.g. TFA) and turbulence in the flow. Traditional 300 to 750 ul mixers often work well in these applications, provided that the column volumes are also large. Smaller column volumes will require smaller mixer volumes to reduce the added dwell effect.
MEDIUM: Routine HPLC Analysis: Typical analytical separations using 3 to 5 mm ID columns (x 100 mm or longer) usually benefit from modest sized mixers within a range of 200 to 400 ul volume. For these applications, I often start with a recommendation to use a mixer which has 10% of the columns volume as a starting point. For a typical 4.6 x 250 mm, 5 micron porous support column, which has about 3 mLs of internal volume, a 300 ul volume mixer usually provides enough mixing volume for routine gradient analysis.
Additional Info:
Back in the 1980's we often related mixer volume to intended flow rate/column dimensions. For example: A mixer size of 25 ul was suggested for 50 ul/min flow rates (commonly used with 1 mm ID columns). A mixer size of 200 ul was suggested for 200 ul/min flow rates (commonly used with 2.1 mm ID columns) and 350 ul mixer volume for 1.000 ml/min flow rates (commonly used with 4.6 mm ID columns). Note: Mixers such as these, with large volumes relative to the column volume contributed to large gradient delay times, but this was, and still is, of less concern for isocratic methods.
As mentioned before, the type of mixer, column volume, flow rate and mobile phase characteristics will help suggest the most applicable volume for your application. When in doubt, select a larger mixer volume for isocratic analysis (less baseline noise, better for gradients) and a smaller one if reducing gradient analysis delay volume is critical.
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Saturday, September 6, 2014
Common Causes of Baseline Noise in HPLC, UHPLC.
Achieving a flat baseline which does not exhibit spikes, ghost peaks, drift or wander in an unpredictable manner should be a primary goal when performing HPLC analysis or developing methods. Methods which result in flat baselines and have well defined, sharp peaks allow for accurate sample area integration. Integration algorithms perform poorly in quantifying peaks on sloped, drifting or noisy baselines. Excessive baseline noise contributes to many problems, including poor quantitation, high %RSD errors, peak identification errors, retention time variation and many other critical problems. Properly developed HPLC methods are reproducible methods which apply and utilize good chromatography fundamentals. Note: "Noise" is a relative term, often w/o meaning. You should always describe it scientifically, measure and compare the signal to noise ration (S/N) of the baseline vs the peak plus note any cyclical patterns (useful in troubleshooting).
Note: A lack of proper training in the operation of the HPLC system, improper start-up or poor
quality maintenance of the chromatograph (Examples: failure to degas and purge the system lines before use; poor mixing; an air bubble stuck in a
check valve, a bad detector lamp or a leak will often result in baseline noise) are the main causes of noise. Your
HPLC system must be optimized for your specific application. Be sure
and allow time for the mobile phase to reach full equilibration with the
system before starting any analysis. Do not start an analysis until the baseline is stable.
In this article, we will discuss how temperature fluctuations, inadequate mixing, inadequate degassing and flow cell contamination can result in excessive baseline noise. We will provide suggestions on how to reduce or eliminate these problems. Troubleshooting should be done on-site, not over the web or telephone.
In this article, we will discuss how temperature fluctuations, inadequate mixing, inadequate degassing and flow cell contamination can result in excessive baseline noise. We will provide suggestions on how to reduce or eliminate these problems. Troubleshooting should be done on-site, not over the web or telephone.
TEMPERATURE FLUCTUATIONS:
To
reduce temperature fluctuations, you must control the temperature of
the column and mobile phase (if applicable) during the analysis. This is
most commonly done by: (a) using equilibrated mobile phase at the start
of the day or analysis, (b) keeping the interconnecting lines as short
as possible (esp. any which exit the column and go to detectors/flow
cells), (c) insulating any stainless steel lines with plastic tubing to
reduce heat loss and (d) using a thermostatted column compartment to
maintain the column at a single set temperature throughout the day.
Control of the column temperature will remove 'temperature' as a
variable from your analysis. Temperature should be a constant run to
run, not a variable. Be sure and document the temperature selected as
part of your method.
INADEQUATE MOBILE PHASE MIXING:
The associated noise and ripple of incomplete mixing can
reduce the limit of detection (LOD) and increase integration error. Both
high pressure (with separate pumps) and low pressure pumping (one pump
with a multi-channel proportioning valve) systems depend on efficient mixing to
reduce noise. For gradient analysis, failure to completely mix the
mobile phase solution before it enters the HPLC column often results in
excessive baseline noise, spikes and poor reproducibility. "Mixing" is
often initially accomplished by combining the flow paths of more than one solvent channel together, using a multi-channel gradient valve or tubing. Mixing also performed directly in a mixer installed in the flow path of an
HPLC pump. This
mixer is often a static mixer (a simple 'Tee', a tube filled with
baffles, a frit or beads, valve orifice or microfluidic device) of low
volume design for chromatography use, but allows adequate mixing of the
liquids within a prescribed flow rate range. The best mixers incorporate
longitudinal and radial mixing in-line. A mixer with too low a volume
or of insufficient design can result in poor mixing of the mobile phase
(note: incorrect solvent compressibility settings can also cause mixing
and noise problems too). To reduce mixing problems, first insure that
the mobile phases used are fully soluble with each other. Next, make
sure that any mixer used is appropriate for the flow rates and volumes
you will be using. If needed, run a gradient valve test to insure that each valve channel is working properly, not leaking or introducing any cross-flow leakage to another channel. Monitor the baseline for pressure stability (% ripple), drift and artifacts (e.g. spikes)
in real time to spot problems and make adjustments to correct them.
INADEQUATE MOBILE PHASE DEGASSING:
For the best results, continuously degas your mobile phase. Reducing the amount of gas will also improve signal to noise levels of detection, reduce drift and reduce pump cavitation. If you are using an electronic vacuum degassing module, make sure it is maintained and working 100%. A faulty degasser may cause more damage (contamination) to your system and methods. Maintain and Repair them just as you do for your other instrument modules. Gas
bubbles may cause check valves to malfunction (get stuck), baseline
noise spikes to appear randomly, flow rates and/or pressures to become irregular,
detector outputs to show high levels of noise (from air in the flow
cell) and also cause the loss of prime or cavitation in pumps. To
achieve the best balance of low noise levels and high reliability, both
aqueous and organic mobile phases should be fully degassed before and during use. This can be
accomplished through stand-alone inline vacuum degassing modules or through
gentle continuous helium gas sparging (*Helium makes an excellent choice of gas as it is not soluble in the mobile phase. Never use Nitrogen or Argon gas, they are soluble in the liquid!). In all cases, degassing must be continuous
(not just done one time). Continuous degassing reduces cyclical noise and signal variations. For this reason, I do not recommend using
ultrasonic baths to degas mobile phase solutions as these are not used in a continuous mode. The mobile phase solution starts to re-absorb gas as soon as you stop sonicating the solution. This results in continuous baseline drift (up and down).
Removal
of gasses is critical to the function of a modern HPLC pumping system.
The liquids used are compressed to very high levels which forces out
solubilized gas from the solutions. This is best accomplished before the
liquid is transferred into the pump. These gas bubbles must be
minimized to achieve desirable baselines. *Even if you use a high pressure pumping system, an inline degassing system reduces the amount of noise and baseline drift. Properly maintain and service your degasser to insure compliant operation. IOW: Whichever method you use, always degas your mobile
phase solutions.
FLOW CELLS:
Many other types of problems not mentioned in this short article can also cause baseline noise. For example, a sticking inlet or outlet valve on the pump, worn piston seals, worn out detector lamp(s) or detector electrode (EC) can induce noise. In all cases, the cause must be investigated in a logical, step-wise manner. Demonstrate what is working and rule out items one-by-one.
Reference: http://hplctips.blogspot.com/2014/01/diagnosing-troubleshooting-hplc.html
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