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Chem. 230 – 10/23 Lecture

Chem. 230 – 10/23 Lecture. Announcements I. Homework Set 3 – Long problems due today Applications Abstract – turn in by today What we are covering today HPLC (Instrumentation, Advanced topic: aerosol-based detectors). Announcements II. Quiz 3 Next Tuesday I have posted an example + key

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Chem. 230 – 10/23 Lecture

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  1. Chem. 230 – 10/23 Lecture

  2. Announcements I • Homework Set 3 – Long problems due today • Applications Abstract – turn in by today • What we are covering today • HPLC (Instrumentation, Advanced topic: aerosol-based detectors)

  3. Announcements II Quiz 3 Next Tuesday I have posted an example + key You are responsible for: GC topics (mobile and stationary phases, instrumentation, packed vs. OT columns, role of T and gradient runs, and 2D GC) SFC topics HPLC topics (stationary phase, mobile phase, instrumentation including detectors) aerosol based detectors for HPLC will be on Quiz 4

  4. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Mobile Phase Delivery Solvent Flow HPLC requires high pressures and thus specific pumps The solvent also needs low levels of dissolved gases for pumps to function For the simplest “dedicated” HPLC, a single solvent reservoir and pump is needed For gradients and/or more method development work, switching between different solvents is needed

  5. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Mobile Phase Delivery Pumps Most pumps use two piston heads 180º out of phase to reduce pressure fluctuations Solvents go into and out of piston heads through one-way “check valves” Exit check valve closes on “in” stroke and entrance check valve closes on “out” stroke In Stroke Check valves Out Stroke closed open closed open pistons

  6. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Mobile Phase Delivery Example of pump with non-functioning check valves Fluctuation in pressure and signal can occur Changes to retention time also will occur Bad check valve leaking

  7. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Mobile Phase Delivery Solvent Flow (for gradient/greater flexibility operations) Dual Pumps (high pressure mixing) Low Pressure Mixing (stream “open” in proportion to fraction) To column To column pump Mixing chamber pumps

  8. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Injection Fixed Loop Injectors (see GC slides for diagram) Used in almost all cases For some injectors, partial filling of loop is possible (Vinj < Vloop), but then filling precision must be good Special injection valves needed for small injections (< 1 to 5 μL) Small injections needed for microbore columns Other Injectors Traps replace loops (can be used if sample is in weak solvent) SPME (not as common as for GC but with solvent removing trapped compounds) SPME requires special injector

  9. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Injection • Sample Matrix • Best chromatography solvent – should be weaker than mobile phase, particularly for larger volume injections • Remember, weaker solvent allows on-column concentrating • With traps, sample must have weaker solvent, but must be pulled off with significantly stronger solvent so pulled off in narrow injection plug • Other concern can be solvent miscibility and solute solubility (example: in reversed phase HPLC, water is a good solvent, but many compounds such as aromatic compounds have limited solubility in weakest solvents)

  10. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Columns Column dimensions Length: balance between flow, pressure and efficiency Diameter: Choice depends on separation purpose Preparative for isolation of larger quantities Microbore usually results in smaller mass detection limits but greater concentration detection limits Special care is needed using microbore with sample injection, pump stability, and extra-column broadening (tubing diameter and fitting connections)

  11. Liquid ChromatographySome Questions A student is running a RP-HPLC separation using methanol and water. The selectivity (α value) is not good. He decides to switch to ethanol in water. Is this a good decision? A chemist is planning on purchasing an HPLC instrument for developing isocratic analysis methods. Is there an advantage to being able to select multiple solvents? In order to decrease H in a column, which column or packing material dimension should be changed? and in which direction? Why would one want to go to a microbore HPLC system? Why is the decrease in H observed often less than predicted when using smaller diameter packing material or small diameter columns? If injecting large volumes of a sample containing trace levels of benzoic acid for a reversed phase separation, will it make any difference what the pH of the sample is? In anion exchange chromatography, what type of sample would allow on-column trapping? What type of samples would give broad peaks if using large injection volumes?

  12. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors Some Generalizations Relative to GC, HPLC detectors perform poorly and cost more Universal Type UV absorption (also considered selective) Refractive Index Aerosol-based detectors (will cover later) Conductivity (for ion chromatography) Selective Type Fluorescence Electrochemical Hyphenated Detectors Photodiode Array Detector (type of UV detector) Mass Spectrometer

  13. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors UV Absorption Detectors The most common type of detector Principle: absorption of ultraviolet (or visible) light Follows Beer’s Law: A = -log(I/Io) = εbC I = intensity of light (Io for blank) ε = molar absorptivity (constant) b = path length C = concentration Best results for 0.001 < A < 1 Fast response – sensitivity trade off in path length (can select cell volumes) Light beam b Cell

  14. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors UV Absorption Detectors Sensitivity to Compounds (ε values) Best for compounds with conjugated double bonds, aromatic groups or strongly absorbing functional groups (e.g. R-NO2, R-I, R-Br) Poor response for compounds with few or weakly absorbing functional groups (worst for R-CN, R-NH2, R-F; poor for R-OR’, R-OH, R-COOH, R-COOR’) Solvents: Requires use of solvents that absorb poorly in UV

  15. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors UV Absorption Detectors Wavelength Selection: Must choose λ > solvent cut-offs Most compounds absorb strongly at short wavelengths but many also absorb less moderately at longer wavelengths More sensitivity at shorter wavelengths (provided little mobile phase absorption) More selectivity at longer wavelengths solvent analyte 180 220 260 Wavelength (nm) Sensitive λ More selective λ

  16. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors UV Absorption Detectors General Properties Reasonably good (but variable) sensitivity Good linearity, reproducibility Good stability (but baseline drift and warm up time) Poor as a universal detector Types: Fixed wavelength (absorption at single wavelength) Variable wavelength (can select one wavelength using monochromator) Photodiode array (can measure at multiple wavelengths simultaneously) – these give some qualitative information and allow more peak overlap

  17. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors Application of UV Detection to Weak Absorbers Use short wavelengths (method must be selective; not always effective) Derivatize compounds to add strong absorber (common for amino acids, carbohydrates) Use indirect UV absorption (absorber added to eluent, analytes displace eluent and give negative peak)

  18. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors Refractive Index Detectors Principle: liquids with different refractive index will diffract light differently Composition will determine refractive index Any compound with a refractive index different than the solvent’s is detectable Advantage: Most universal detector (can detect weakly absorbing compounds) Disadvantages: Gradients are not possible Requires thermal stability Generally not very sensitive

  19. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Ion Exchange Chromatography • Types of Instruments: • Single column • With analytical plus suppressor columns • Detection in Single Column Instruments • Other detection methods (fairly common) • Conductivity detection • Conductivity Detector • Resistance measured (AC circuit) • Conductivity = 1/(resistance) • Ions in solution create conductance • Conductivity depends on ion concentration and size From HPLC column Electronics Conductivity cell

  20. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – IC • Difficulties with single column instruments: • Both analytes and ion exchanger conduct electricity • High concentration of ion exchanger means high background conductance and difficulties in detecting small concentrations of analytes • Often large ions used as exchanger (such as potassium hydrogen phthalate for anion exchange)

  21. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – IC • Suppressor Columns • The purpose of the suppressor column is to convert the ion exchanger to mostly non-ionic compounds • Example below with sodium bicarbonate eluent (Na+HCO3- is the ion exchanger) in anion exchange • In the suppressor column, Na+ is replaced with H+ • This converts conductive Na+HCO3- to non-conductive H2CO3 • NaCl is converted to HCl (still conductive) • Na2HPO4 is converted to H+H2PO4- (less conductive) • This reduces the baseline and increases sensitivity Na+HCO3- Suppressor Column Separation column To Conductivity detector H+Cl- Na+2HPO42- Na+Cl- H+ In; Na+ out

  22. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors Electrochemical Detectors Principle: Redox reactions occur at electrodes following column Potential cycle used to periodically oxidize/reduce analytes at electrode Current depends on concentration of analyte being reduced or oxidized (similar to A in UV detector) Electrode potential determines classes of compounds that are detectable (similar to λ in UV detector) From column Analyte electrode Referenceelectrode Voltage supply/ electrometer

  23. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors Electrochemical Detector Advantages: Very sensitive (limits of detection under 1 pg possible) Adjustable selectivity Wide range of compounds can be detected (including UV inactive compounds) Advantageous for microbore Disadvantages Electrode fouling Variable analyte response Requires ions to “complete circuit” Array Detectors: Can have multiple electrodes in detector (set to different potentials)

  24. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors Fluorescence Detectors Detection Principle: Light promotes molecules to excited electronic state Excited molecules transition from lowest excited state back to the ground state and emit light in the process Equipment: High intensity light source Filters or monochromators to select wavelengths (before and after cell) Sensitive light detector M + hν→ M* M*→ M*’ (lower vibrational level) M*’ → M + hν’ Light Source Filter or monochromator Light detector

  25. Liquid ChromatographyInstrumentation – Detectors • Fluorescence Detectors • Advantages: • Greater sensitivity possible (for molecules with high fluorescence efficiencies) because easy to detect small signal against zero background (see below) • Much greater selectivity because few molecules fluoresce, particularly at selected wavelengths • Disadvantages: • Limited to relatively few molecules (although derivatization is also possible) Absorption of light Emission of light 95% transparent (equiv. to A = 0.022) Weak light in black background

  26. Liquid ChromatographyDetector Questions A compound has an absorptivity of 493 M-1 cm-1 at 210 nm and 32 M-1 cm-1 at 280 nm. Why would one even consider setting the wavelength to 280 nm? Describe one way to use a UV detector for detecting weakly absorbing organic compounds. Describe how you could use a photodiode array detector to determine if the odd shaped peak below is from one or multiple compounds. A (254 nm) Time

  27. Liquid ChromatographyMore Questions • Why is electrochemical detection difficult to use with non-bonded silica HPLC? • When weakly absorbing compounds are derivatized, it is more common to use fluorescent derivatizing agents. Why is this? • What is the advantage of using suppression in ion chromatography? • Why is suppressed ion chromatography not so useful for weak acid anions vs. strong acid anions?

  28. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLC Example Advanced Method Presentation

  29. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLC Outline Introduction to Technology Theory Including Three Types of Detectors Advantages and Disadvantages of ABDs Some Applications Conclusions References

  30. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCIntroduction Limitations of Conventional Detectors UV Absorption Detectors: Not very universal Poor sensitivity for many classes of compounds (carbohydrates, fats, amino acids, dicarboxylic acids, etc.) Refractive Index Detectors: Low and somewhat variable sensitivity Not gradient compatible Mass Spectrometer Detectors: Not all compounds ionize readily Expensive

  31. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCIntroduction Processes in Aerosol-Based Detectors: Effluent from column is nebulized producing spray of solvent and solute Spray droplets are heated in an oven, evaporating solvent gas and producing aerosol particles from solute Aerosol passes to an aerosol detector to produce a signal Nebulizer Spray Chamber N2(g) HPLCColumn Oven Aerosol Detector particle droplet

  32. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCIntroduction Mobile Phase Requirements Solvent must be volatile (and cause little column bleed) Analyte Requirements Works best if analyte is non-volatile Semi-volatile compounds give reduced response

  33. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCTheory Nebulization produces a distribution of drop sizes Solvent viscosity and surface tension can affect distribution of droplet sizes Evaporation shifts this to distribution of particle sizes based on: where: dd, dp are drop and particle diameters, C is mass concentration, and ρp is particle density Size Distributions

  34. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCTheory Types of Aerosol-Based Detectors Depends on method of detecting aerosol particles Evaporative Light Scattering Detection (ELSD) (Charlesworth, J. M. Anal. Chem.1978, 50, 1414) Condensation Nucleation Light Scattering Detection (CNLSD) (Allen, L. B.; Koropchak, J. A. Anal. Chem.1993, 65, 841) Charged Aerosol Detector (CAD)/Aerosol Charge Detector (Dixon, R. W.; Peterson, D. S. Anal. Chem., 2002, 74, 2930) 

  35. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCTheory ELSD principles Detection by light-scattering by particles Efficient detection when dp ~ λ; less efficient at other sizes Non-linear response results At low concentrations, dp < λ so sensitivity is poor (detection limits of around 0.1 to 1 μg mL-1) Detector concentration Expanded Region

  36. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCTheory Condesation Nucleation Light Scattering Detection Detection principle also uses particle light-scattering but overcomes poor detection of small particles by growing small particles to bigger particles by condensation of vapor on to particles This technology is very sensitive (a single 3 nm particle can be detected) This can translate to very low detection limits (~10 ppb or ~50 pg) under optimal conditions Commercialized recently Particles In Butanol condensor To light-scattering detector

  37. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCTheory Charged Aerosol Detection Particles charged as aerosol jet collides with ion-rich jet from corona discharge (commercial version) Charged particles are collected on a filter with charge passed to electrometer (current measured) In another version, particles are charged as they pass near a corona discharge region Sensitivity has equalled CNLSD (at least at standard HPLC flows) Large response range and linearity at lower concentrations Aerosol In Corona Discharge Wire Ion Filter (negatively charged rod) To Electrometer Aerosol Filter Gamache et al., LCGC North America (2005).

  38. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCAdvantages and Disadvantages Advantages: Better performing universal detectors than refractive index detectors Universal response for non-volatile analytes CNLSD and CAD sensitivity is similar to typical UV sensitivity Disadvantages: Requires analytes of low-volatility, volatile mobile phases CNLSD and CAD are often limited by solvent purity and column bleed Non-linear calibration often is needed Cost is higher than UV Detectors

  39. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCSome Applications Food ELSD has been used extensively to characterize carbohydrates and lipids. Methodology requires no derivatizations and allows analysis of whole lipids (as opposed to just fatty acids) Polymers (with SEC) Useful for polymers without chromophores Pharmaceutical Industry ABDs are useful for assessing contaminants in pharmaceutical products Biotechnology and Environmental Samples Greater potential with CNLSD and CAD for analyzing low concentration samples (some carbohydrate examples) Analysis of Cations, Anions and Neutrals Use in combination with zwitterionic stationary phase allows simultaneous detection of three categories in single run

  40. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCTriglyceride Example • By Lísa et al (J. Chromatogr. A, 1176 (2007) 135-142). • Homogenous trigylcerides shown above without (left) and with “gradient compensation” (right) • Gradient compensation allows response to remain proportional to area with a gradient • An alternative is to use a 2 dimensional calibration (Hutchinson et al., J. Chromatogr. A, 1217 (2010) 7418-7427) • Gradient compensation uses 2 additional pumps pumping eluent after the column to produce a constant eluent composition • Plant oil samples shown below

  41. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCPaclitaxel Example • By Sun et al. (J. Chromatogr. A, 1177 (2008) 87-91). • Looked at impurities in paclitaxel (a anti-cancer natural product from Pacific yew tree) using UV and CAD • Shown in upper figure (standards – highest and stressed paclitaxel – lower) • Paclitaxel impurity response shown to be uniform by CAD but not by UV detection • Pharmaceutical impurity analysis used for determining acceptable pharmaceuticals • If no standards available, CAD provides better estimation of impurity levels

  42. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCSmoke Tracer Example • My work (published in Dixon and Baltzell and Ward et al. – see my research webpage) • Detected levoglucosan and related monosaccharide anhydrides • These are thermal breakdown products from cellulose and hemicellulose • It was possible to use the levoglucosan concentrations to estimate the total particulate matter (2.5) derived from woodsmoke cellulose levoglucosan Chico Winter Air Sample mannosan levoglucosan

  43. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCGlycan Profiling oligosaccharides • My current work (with Thomas Peavy, Biological Sciences) also preliminary work done by Ignaki et al. • Glycans (glycoprotein oligosaccharides) are difficult to quantify • Glycans are post-translational modifications and composition can depend on host organism/cells • Profiles change in cancer cells • Standards are unavailable or expensive • Currently running surrogate standards to prepare multi-dimensional calibration (depending on mass concentration and retention time) • Test standards show errors of ~0 to 25% Peptide backbone Frog Egg example

  44. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCConclusions ELSD has been replacing RID as a universal detector (at least for non-volatile compounds) ABDs can be used without exact standards for quantification (much as an FID is used in GC) Biggest limitations are volatility/non-volatility requirements, cost, and linearity

  45. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCReferences ELSD Text (p. 247-248) Charlesworth, J. M., Evaporative analyzer as a mass detector for liquid chromatography, Anal. Chem., 50, 1978, 1414-1420. Review: Koropchak et al., Fundamental Aspects of Aerosol-Based Light-Scattering Detectors for Separations, Adv. Chromatogr. 40, 2000, 275. CNLSD Allen, L. B. and J. A. Koropchak, Condensation nucleation light scattering: A new approach to development of high-sensitivity, universal detectors for separations, Anal. Chem., 65, 1993, 841-844. Same review listed for ELSD CAD Dixon, R. W. and D. S. Peterson, Development and testing of a detection method for liquid chromatography based on aerosol charging, Anal. Chem., 74, 2002, 2930-2937. Gamache, P.H., R.S. McCarthy, S.M. Freeto, D.J. Asa, M.J. Woodcock, K. Laws, and R.O. Cole, HPLC analysis of nonvolatile analytes using charged aerosol detection, LCGC North America, 23, 150, 152, 154, 156, 158, 160-161, 2005.

  46. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCReferences For Applications: (See my faculty web page for CAD references) Foods: Asa, D., Carbohydrate and oligosaccharide analysis with a universal HPLC detector, Am. Laboratory, 38, 16, 18, 2006. Moreau, R. A..  The analysis of lipids via HPLC with a charged aerosol detector, Lipids, 41, 727-734, 2006. Lísa, M., F. Lynen, M. Holčapek, and P. Sandra, Quantitation of triacylglycerols from plant oils using charged aerosol detection with gradient compensation Pharmaceuticals: Loughlin, J., H. Phan, M. Wan, S. Guo, K. May and B. Lin, Evaluation of charged aerosol detection (CAD) as a complementary technique for high-throughput LC-MS-UV-ELSD analysis of drug discovery screening libraries, Am. Laboratory, 39, 24-27, 2007. Sun, P., X. Wang, L. Alquier, C. A. Maryanoff, Determination of relative response factors of impurities in paclitaxel with high performance liquid chromatography equipped with ultraviolet and charged aerosol detectors, J. Chromatogr., A, 1177, 87-91, 2008. Biotechnology: Inagaki, S., J.Z. Min, and T. Toyo’oka, Direct detection method of oligosaccharides by high-performance liquid chromatography with charged aerosol detection, Biomed. Chromatgr., 21, 338-342, 2007. Atmospheric Aerosols: Dixon, R. W. and G. Baltzell, Determination of levoglucosan in atmospheric aerosols using high performance liquid chromatography with aerosol charge detection, J. Chromatogr.A, 1109, 214-221, 2006.

  47. Aerosol-Based Detectors for HPLCQuestions For a complicated sample with several analytes present at moderate concentrations (around 50 μg mL-1), is it advantageous to use an ELSD (vs. a UV Detector) 1) if the compounds are weak absorbers, 2) if the compounds are strong absorbers? What instrument components will ELSD and CNLSD have in common that are not present in CAD? ABDs can not detect volatile analytes. How should weakly absorbing volatile compounds be determined? With a single calibration standard (over different concentrations), is it possible to estimate concentrations of unknown compounds (e.g. for compounds without any standards)? and under what conditions? Protein concentration can be estimated by looking at absorption from aromatic amino acids? Why might using an ABD be a better way of quantifying unknown proteins?

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