Translator for HPLC HINTS and TIPS for Chromatographers

Showing posts with label Pore Volume. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pore Volume. Show all posts

Saturday, January 30, 2016

HPLC Column Support Pore VOLUME

If an HPLC column had no packing material inside it, then the volume of liquid contained in the cylinder could be calculated using the formula for the volume of a cylinder as follows: 



      Volume of Cylinder = Pi * r2 * L;     
          [where Volume is in ul; Pi = 3.14; r = column radius (mm) and L= column length (mm)]
  Example: Using the above formula, a 4.6 mm x 250 mm column would have an empty volume of 4,155 ul (~ 4.16 mls).

For most chromatography applications we pack the column with a high surface area porous media. Often this is a silica based support. This support media fills the empty space inside the column reducing the total volume accessible by a liquid (or to the samples). If the media used was not porous, it would fill most of the space (depends on size and shape of media). Most commonly used chromatography supports are porous and leave about 70% (0.7) of the original volume available to the mobile phase and sample [Pore Volume = Surface Area (m²/g) x Pore Diameter  (Å) / 40,000]. Based on this information, we use a value of 0.7 as the average pore volume for a packed chromatography column (some supports will have pore volumes which are larger or smaller than this value. The manufacturer will often measure it and provide the value on their published specification sheet).


Using a typical 4.6mm x 250mm column we found the total volume to be 4,155 ul (4.16 mLs). If we now multiply this empty column volume by 0.7 (note: use 0.7 or 70% for columns with fully porous particles and 0.55 or 55% for superficially porous particles) we obtain 2,908ul total volume (2.9 mLs). This is the estimated volume of the fully packed column. This value is very important as it provides an estimate of what the column dead volume will be so we can calculate the 'T' zero time of an unretained analyte. This estimate will depend on the column dimensions, using our HPLC method (be sure and take into account the measured flow rate to determine the column "dead time"). This is one of the very first calculations you make when starting or modifying an HPLC method and is critical information to know at all stages of method development. All chromatographers should know how to estimate this value before using an HPLC system. *You should confirm this estimate by injecting an unretained sample onto the column and measure the retention volume, then compare the two values. The measured value is the most important number (the one we use for calculations), but the estimate should be close (+/- 15%). The estimate is still useful for troubelshooting and method development as when combined with K prime, it provides a quick measure if chromatography has occurred (retention).

For more information on the importance of knowing the HPLC Column Dead Time, please refer to this article link

Notes: The measured support pore Diameter (SIZE) is important for determining if the sample will have access to the inside of the support (e.g. A support with a pore size of 80Å will be too small for most large peptides or proteins, but a support that is 300Å will allow access to many, not all, larger molecules). A support with too small a pore diameter will not allow the sample to access the high surface area inside the support. Instead, the sample will be unretained and pass by it eluting at the column's void volume. This is the basis of SEC or GPC analysis where we use columns with different pore sizes to "filter" samples based on size. Large pores for large Mw samples and small pores for low Mw samples. A general rule is use 300Å or larger pores for samples with Mw > 10,000 and 80Å to 150Å for smaller samples.

More info on pore volume can be found at this article link: https://hplctips.blogspot.com/2014/12/hplc-column-pore-volume-or-pore.html


Friday, August 26, 2011

Pressure Drop Across an HPLC / UHPLC Column

Many of you prefer tables of data over equations that you must work out. So, instead of providing you with another equation, I have done some basic measurements for you to provide a general overview of how particle size (porous) effects System backpressure.

For simplicity, let us start with a few parameters. Pore Volume = 0.70; Linear Velocity = 1.44 mm/sec; Solvent Viscosity = 0.89 cP at 25C (Water). 

Pore Volume and Flow Resistivity will vary by column type. Obviously the back pressure will be higher with more viscous solvents (e.g. EtOH is 1.20 cP) and lower with less viscous solvents (e.g. ACN is 0.34cP). A Table of HPLC Solvent Viscosity values can be found here [ http://www.hplctools.com/lcsolvent.htm ]. Linear flow rates have been used for all column I.D.'s to better illustrate the relationship between column dimensions and flow rate. If you double the flow rate, then the pressure will approximately double as well. 

Note that when run at traditional linear velocities, most 2.5u particles are within the maximum pressure limits of most HPLC systems (under 400 bars). Only the newer sub 2.0 micron particles used in long columns exceed the 400 bar limit. The higher maximum pressure limits of many UHPLC systems allow the use of higher flow rates with these particles. Naturally, you should optimize both column efficiency and system dwell volume when developing any UHPLC method. Failure to optimize the dwell volume (and minimize all volumes) may result in very poor chromatography separations. Meeting any/all backpressure requirements to run a method does not translate to success in sample analysis. Successful ultra-fast separations require ultra-low system dwell volumes, higher sampling rates and usually smaller flow cell volumes.

HPLC Column I.D. (mm)
Particle Size (u)
Column Length (mm)
Flow Rate (mL/min)
Observed System Back Pressure (Bars)
4.6
5
250
1.000
89
4.6
5
150
1.000
54
4.6
5
100
1.000
36
4.6
5
50
1.000
18
4.6
3.5
250
1.000
182
4.6
3.5
150
1.000
109
4.6
3.5
100
1.000
73
4.6
3.5
50
1.000
36
4.6
2.5
250
1.000
357
4.6
2.5
150
1.000
214
4.6
2.5
100
1.000
143
4.6
2.5
50
1.000
71
4.6
1.9
250
1.000
618
4.6
1.9
150
1.000
371
4.6
1.9
100
1.000
247
4.6
1.9
50
1.000
124





3.0
5
250
0.430
90
3.0
5
150
0.430
54
3.0
5
100
0.430
36
3.0
5
50
0.430
18
3.0
3.5
250
0.430
184
3.0
3.5
150
0.430
110
3.0
3.5
100
0.430
74
3.0
3.5
50
0.430
37
3.0
2.5
250
0.430
361
3.0
2.5
150
0.430
217
3.0
2.5
100
0.430
144
3.0
2.5
50
0.430
72
3.0
1.9
250
0.430
625
3.0
1.9
150
0.430
375
3.0
1.9
100
0.430
250
3.0
1.9
50
0.430
125





2.1
5
250
0.210
90
2.1
5
150
0.210
54
2.1
5
100
0.210
36
2.1
5
50
0.210
18
2.1
3.5
250
0.210
184
2.1
3.5
150
0.210
110
2.1
3.5
100
0.210
73
2.1
3.5
50
0.210
37
2.1
2.5
250
0.210
360
2.1
2.5
150
0.210
216
2.1
2.5
100
0.210
144
2.1
2.5
50
0.210
72
2.1
1.9
250
0.210
623
2.1
1.9
150
0.210
374
2.1
1.9
100
0.210
249
2.1
1.9
50
0.210
125

* The results obtained in this table from are from one of our HPLC systems and reflects the total system backpressure (what the pressure gauge reads), with the column inline. Your results may vary due to differences in HPLC system used, flow path, tubing ID, column choice and mobile phase selected.