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EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY by THOMAS SCOTT KEPHART, B.S. A DISSERTATION IN CHEMISTRY Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Texas Tech University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for die Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Approved May, 2001

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Page 1: EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE A …

EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE

LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY

by

THOMAS SCOTT KEPHART, B.S.

A DISSERTATION

IN

CHEMISTRY

Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Texas Tech University in

Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for

die Degree of

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY

Approved

May, 2001

Page 2: EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE A …

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I would like to thank my advisor, Sandy Dasgupta for his patience and

guidance these last five years. I would also like to thank my wife, Nicole Kephart

and my son. Hunter Kephart. I could not have done it with out their support. I

would also like to thank my father, Bill Kephart. The acknowledgements page

would not be complete with out thanking Bill Shumway for all the conversations

at lunch that kept me going the last few years.

This research was partially supported by the U. S. Environmental Protection

Agency through STAR Grant R82-5344-01-0. This manuscript has not, however,

been reviewed by the agency and no endorsements should be inferred. General

Assistance from Dionex Corporation is also acknowledged. We also gratefully

acknowledge the gift of the ZirChrom-PBD by ZirChrom Separations Inc. We

would also like to thank Dr. Matthias Pursch of the National Institute of Standards

and Technology for the Ti02 based packings.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ii

LIST OF FIGURES v

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS viii

CHAPTER

I. INTRODUCTION 1

Micro Column Liquid Chromatography 3

Instrument Requirements 4

Research Presented in this Dissertation 8

Literature Cited 13

II. AN AFFORDABLE HIGH PERFROMANCE PUMPING SYSTEM FOR GRADIENT CAPILLARY LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY 16

I ntroduction 16

Experimental 18

Results and Discussions 22

Literature Cited 28

III. HOT ELUENT CAPILLARY LIQUID CHROAMTOGRAPHY 37

Introduction 37

Experimental 38

Results and Discussions 42

Literature Cited 50

IV. SUPERHOT WATER ELUENT CAPILLARY LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY 61

Introduction 61

Experimental 64

Results and Discussions 67

Literature Cited 78

V. FUTURE APPLICATIONS AND POTENTIAL IMPROVEMENTS 89

iii

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Portable RPLC System 89

Super-Hot Water LC-MS System 90

Supercritical Water Chromatography 91

Liquid Ionization Detector 92

Experimental Verification of Boiling Point in the Column.... 93

Literature Cited 94

VI. CONCLUSION 95

APPENDIX

A. RETENTION MECHANISM THEORY 98

B. HPLC COLUMN PERFORMANCE 100

C. COMPUTER CONTROL OF PUMPING SYSTEM 104

IV

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LIST OF FIGURES

2.1. Layoutof the capillary HPLC system 30

2.2. Stainless steel syringe end seal design 31

2.3. Pressure stability during a typical isocratic run. 75% acetonitrile in water flowing at 5 ^iL/rnin, through a 5 |j,m C-18 silica column... 32

2.4. Illustrative isocratic system reproducibility. RSD in retention time is < 1%. All analytes are 500 |JM, 20 nL injection. 5-|am PRP-1 column, 2 i^L/min. Peak identities from left to right: cytosine, uracil, adenine, uridine, thymidine, adenosine, xanthosine, and inosine.... 33

2.5. Gradient chromatogram for the same sample and same column as in Figure 2.4. Flow 2 |aL/min 34

2.6. Illustrative gradient reproducibility, 5 |a,m C-18 silica column, flow 5 I^L/min. Average RSD in peak retention time is 0.545%. Amounts injected are as follows: peaks 1-3: -100 pg, 4: 120 pg, 5, 7-10: 85 pg, 6: 150 pg. Peak identities from left to right: (1) phenol, (2) benzaldehyde, (3) benzonitrile, (4) nitrobenzene, (5) benzene, (6) bromobenzene, (7) toluene, (8) ethylbenzene, (9) propylbenzene, and (10) t-butylbenzene 35

2.7. Chromatogram on a 12 cm long ZirChrom-PBD column, flow rate 6.3 pL/min, 6500 psi. All samples were in 75% acetonitrile, 25% water. Before injection, the eluent is 37% ACN, at injection it is switched to 55% ACN. The time for the step change in gradient to reach the head of the column is ~ 30 seconds. -100 pg of each analyte is injected 36

3.1. Experimental set up of chromatographic system 52

3.2. Viscosity of 50:50 v/v ACN:H20 as a function of temperature temperature. The points represent experimental data; the best fit line is shown. The error bars on the experimental points are smaller than the dimensions of the symbols plotted 53

3.3. Retention time of benzene and homologs as a function of temperature. The error bars on the experimental points are smaller than the dimensions of the symbols plotted 54

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3.4. Computed diffusion coefficient of the 50:50 ACN:H20 eluent as a function of temperature. The best-fit data from Figure 2 was used to calculate Dm 55

3.5. Separations of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and propylbenzene at four different temperatures. A flow rate of 2 ^iL/min was used throughout 56

3.6. Knox plot of ethylbenzene at four different temperatures 57

3.7 Knox A, B, and C terms for ethylbenzene as a function of temperature 58

3.8. a) Isocratic separation of (from left to right) benzaldehyde, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, n-propylbenzene, n-butylbenzene, n-amylbenzene, 1-phenylhexane and 1-phenylheptane. A flow rate of 3.5 (^L/min and a column temperature of 200 °C were used. b) Gradient separation of the same mixture, same flow rate and temperature 59

3.9. High-speed gradient separation on C-18 modified Ti02 column of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, n-propylbenzene, n-butylbenzene, n-amylbenzene, 1-phenylhexane and 1-phenylheptane. Flow rate 25 fj,L/min; column temperature 160 °C 60

4.1. Hot water chromatography system, schematically shown. CV: Check valve; PG: pressure sensor and gauge; SSC: silica saturation column; CH: column heater; BPC: back pressure column; 81

4.2. 60 times magnification of capillary column after structural failure.... 82

4.3. Dielectric constant and viscosity of water at 7200 psi along with the viscosity and dielectric constant of both pure ACN and a 50% ACN 83

4.4. Dielectric constant of water as a function of pressure 84

4.5. Separations on (left) ZirChrom-Carb and (right) ZirChrom-PBD columns; detection at 195 nm, flow rate of 8.6 |iL/min. s: solvent (acetonitrile), 1: phenol, 2: benzene, 3: toluene, 4: nitrobenzene, 5: ethylbenzene, and 6: n-propylbenzene. All subsequent figures has the same numerical identification for analytes 85

VI

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4.6. High speed separations (a) ZirChrom-Carb and (b) ZirChrom-PBD columns at 300 °C and 240 °C, respectively 86

4.7. Van't Hoff plots for the retention of benzene derivatives 87

4.8. Thermal gradient performed in GC oven using a FID detector. 180 i m i.d. 13 cm silica capillary with ZirChrom-Carb packing, flow rate 8.6 nL/min. Temperature gradient started at 100 °C and was ramped to 250 °C @ 50 °C/min 88

Vll

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LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS

ACN - Acetonitrile

CE - Capillary electrophoresis

FID - Flame ionization detector

GC - Gas Chromatography

HPLC - High Performance liquid chromatography or high pressure liquid chromatography

HTLC - High temperature liquid chromatography

LC - Liquid Chromatography

LC-MS - Liquid chromatographic instrument coupled to a mass spectrometric detector

MS - Mass spectrometry

NMR - Nuclear magnetic resonance

ODS - Octadecyl silicate, C-18 packing

PAH - Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon

PBD - Polybutadiene

PEEK - Poly(ether-etherketone)

PC - Personal computer

PCB - Polychlorinated biphenyls

PRP - Polymeric reverse phase

PSDVB - Polystyrene divinylbenzene

PTFE - Polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon®)

Vll l

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Rl - Refractive index

RPLC - Reverse phase liquid chromatography

RSD - Relative standard deviation SFC - Supercritical fluid chromatography

UV - Ultraviolet

Vis - Visible light

IX

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CHAPTER I

INTRODUCTION

The origin of chromatography can be traced back to 1906 when Tswett

separated chlorophyll pigments using a glass column packed with calcium

carbonate particles. ' Tswett coined the term "chromatography" by combining

two Greek words, chroma, color and graphein, write and defined it as a method

in which different components of a mixture can be separate on an absorbent

column in a flowing system.

From Tswett's original work until the 1930's, little research was done in the

field of chromatography. Starting in the 1930's, however, many new advances

came: thin-layer, ion-exchange and electrophorefic chromatography were all

developed during this decade. Paper, partition, and gas chromatography were

developed in the 1940's. The 1950's brought the development of gas-liquid

chromatography and gel based chromatography. Supercritical fluid

chromatography made its appearance in the 1960's.^

The evolufion of high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)

spanned many decades. The promise of faster and more efficient separations

propelled the discipline ever fonward. Research in HPLC started in the early

1960's and continued to evolve until it became a well-accepted method by the

1980's. The advances in HPLC involved the development of high pressure

pumping systems, small diameter particles with controlled porosity, new

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stationary phases, injectors and small volume detectors.'* Modern HPLC may be

divided into five different classes according to the retention mechanism utilized:

adsorption, partition, size exclusion, affinity, and ion exchange. Adsorption and

partition separations are based on the competition of neutral analytes between a

liquid mobile phase and a neutral, solid (adsorption) or liquid-like (partifion)

stationary phase. Size exclusion chromatography is based on molecular sieving,

affinity chromatography is based on specific detention like a 'lock and key'

mechanism, and ion exchange is based on the competifion of charged analytes

for the oppositely charged sites on the stationary phase.

Adsorption and partition chromatography can be broken down further into

normal phase and reverse phase. Normal phase chromatography was the first to

be performed and is thus, for historical reasons, called "normal phase." This type

of separation uses a polar stationary phase and a less polar mobile phase. The

origin of reverse phase type separations (the opposite of normal phase using a

non-polar stafionary phase and a more polar eluent) can be traced back to the

late 1940's.^'^ The term "reverse phase chromatography" can be traced back to

Howard and Martin who coined the phrase in 1950. ^ Due to its speed, efficiency

and diversity, reverse phase chromatography has grown to be the most widely

used chromatographic technique.'* Only reverse phase type separations are

considered in this dissertafion.

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Micro Column Liquid Chromatography

The first work in micro-column chromatography is credited to Horvath and

co-workers in 1967.°'^ These studies used 0.5-1.0 mm stainless steel capillaries

packed with pellicular particles to separate ribonucleotides. Starting in 1977, Ishii

and co-workers described, in a series of publications, the use of slurry packed

Teflon micro-columns (0.5 mm i.d.); these papers are generally regarded as the

pioneering studies in micro-column liquid chromatography.^°' ^^ ' ' '*' ^ Shortly

after Ishii a group led by Scott published papers on their work with 1.0 mm

columns.*^'^^*°'^^'^° The inifial work by Ishii and Scott's groups along with the

work of Novotny^*' ' ^ and Yang '* are all regarded as key publications in the

development of micro-scale liquid chromatography.

The research into the capillary scale has been driven by the fundamental

advantages that this small scale has over the conventional (4.6 mm) columns.

The capillary scale provides; (1) excellent solvent economy, (2) small sample

requirements, (3) high mass sensitivity, and (4) ease of coupling to sophisticated

detectors especially mass spectrometers.^^'^^ However, the development of

capillary based separation systems mirrors the original development of HPLC.

The technique is in an ongoing process of maturation and has once again been

dependent on the development of adequate pumping systems, injectors,

columns, and detectors.^^

Page 13: EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE A …

Instrument Requirements

Pumping system

Capillary based HPLC requires a pumping system that is able to deliver

reproducible, pulse-free flow rates in the 1 |aL/min range. Split flow methods

have been used to reduce the flow rate of a conventional HPLC pump. This

method uses a flow splitter that splits off most of the flow through a restrictor

capillary and produces a flow rate in the i^L/min or nL/min range for the capillary

column.^^ The problems with this type of pumping system are: (1) solvent

consumption is equal to a conventional system and (2) the percent of the flow

that is sent to the capillary is based on the split ratio, which is dependent on the

viscosity of the eluent. Split flow based pumping systems are not an appropriate

pumping method to use when changes in the viscosity are expected. This

includes solvent gradients or temperature gradients.

Today, pumps are commercially available which allow flow rates in the low

iL /min range. The Cap-LC system by Waters^® uses a pumping system capable

of gradient flow rates in the 1-40 |j,L/min range; however, the system costs

$70,000. Other less expensive commercial systems exists;^° however, these

utilize split flow method. The pressure limits of most of these systems are

around 5000 psi.

Custom made pumping systems have been developed to handle extreme

pressures. Jorgenson's group has developed an ultra high pressure pumping

Page 14: EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE A …

system capable of pressures up to 130,000 PSI.^* There are, however, no on­

line injectors that can be used with the system.

Injector

To avoid column overloading, the volume of sample injected onto the

column has to be smaller than 1/100 the column volume.^^ In the capillary scale,

this corresponds to an injection volume from one nanoliter (nL) to one microliter

(|iL). Commercial injectors are available with injection volumes down to 20 nL.

Another concern with an injector is its ability to handle high pressures. Vaico has

introduced an injector (model C2XL) which is capable of operating at pressure up

to 12,000 psi while the convenfional VaIco injectors are rated at 5000 psi.

Capillary columns

The column is the heart of any chromatographic system. It is the column

that separates the analytes allowing analytical information to be obtained from

the detector. Micro-LC columns have commonly been classified into four

categories based on the internal diameter of the column. This classification

invokes: micro-bore columns (1-2 mm i.d.), packed capillary columns (0.1-0.5

mm), semi-packed capillaries (0.02-0.1 mm i.d.), and open tubular capillaries

(0.01-0.075 mm i.d.).^^ Only packed capillaries with an internal diameter of 0.18

mm i.d. are used in this work.

Page 15: EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE A …

The column, in modern capillary liquid chromatography, is typically made

from fused silica capillaries; however, other column materials have been used

such as poly(ether-etherketone) (PEEK), Teflon tubes, and stainless steel

capillaries. At the tail of the column, a frit is used to keep the packing particles

from being pushed out of the column. Frits have been made from many different

materials including metal screen, porous glass either from glass wool or sintered

glass particles, or polymeric materials. Frits are also used at the head of the

column to prevent particles from escaping back towards the injector. In this

work, no frit was used at the head of the column. This allows the column to be

easily trimmed as the packing settles.

The packing process is crucial to the performance of the capillary column.

Many different techniques have been reported using methods ranging from slurry

packing, dry packing, and electrokinetic packing. '*' ^ The most popular

technique is wet slurry packing. Slurry packing consists of suspending the

packing particles in an appropriate solvent based on the chemical and physical

properties of the packing. The packing slurry is placed into a chamber to which

the head of the column is attached. A high pressure pump is used to deliver the

packing into the column. Unfortunately the process of packing capillary columns

is still an art and different techniques are required for each different type of

packing particle. Many papers have been published on the aspects of packing

capillary columns.^ ' ' ' ' ^

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Detectors

Numerous detectors have been developed for use with capillary scale

HPLC. In the past 15 years, detection methods in the capillary scale have been

a major research area due to the concurrent grow/th of capillary electrophoresis

(CE) and capillary HPLC. The most widely used detecfion method is UV

absorbance.'*" Other detection methods have been developed using refractive

index (Rl) detectors,'*^ laser based Rl detectors,'*^ fluorescence detectors,''^

electrochemical detectors'*^'*^'*^ and gas chromatographic (GC) detectors.^''

There has also been research into hyphenated detection systems such as

nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry (NMR)'*^ and mass spectrometers

(MS).'*^ Carbon containing eluents cannot be used with flame ionizafion detector

(FID). Recent research into superheated water based reverse phase liquid

chromatography has enabled the use of FID's in capillary LC.'*^

Extra column band broadening

The small peak volume in capillary chromatography magnifies any

sources of dispersion present in the system. Dispersion in liquid

chromatography, either conventional scale or micro scale, has three main

sources: the injector, connecting tubing, and the detector. Minimizing the

volumes as much as possible can minimize the dispersion due to the injector and

the detector. Extra-column broadening due to connecting tubing increases

linearly with the length of the tubing and with the fourth power of the inner

Page 17: EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE A …

diameter.^^ Throughout this work, peak broadening has been reduced to a

minimum by using small injection volumes, direct connection when possible, and

on column detecfion.

Research Presented in this Dissertation

The primary goal of this research project was to explore methods to

decrease analysis time in reverse phase liquid chromatographic separations by

creating a capillary scale instrument that was capable of operafing at high

pressures as well as high temperatures. When compared to a conventional

system, the instrument needed to provide significant improvements in initial cost,

operating costs, and analysis times. These requirements were met by

developing an inexpensive gradient pumping system capable of generating

12,000 psi along with a column heating system capable of heating the column to

400 °C. Heating the column had two effects: (1) the high temperature lowers the

viscosity of the eluent, which allows higher linear velocifies, and (2) the increase

in the diffusion coefficient increases the efficiency of the separation. Normally

the use of higher linear velocities reduces the analysis time but leads to a major

loss of efficiency. An increase in diffusion coefficient mifigates this problem while

the decrease in viscosity allows high flow rates. The use of high temperatures

also allowed the use of superheated water as a reverse phase eluent. Typical

reverse phase eluents use organic modifiers that are harmful and expensive. A

system capable of using superheated water can eliminate the organic solvent

8

Page 18: EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE A …

replacing it with inexpensive and harmless water. The elimination of the organic

solvent also allows the coupling of the system to new detection methods like

fiame ionization detection which, is a universal detector for carbon containing

analytes.

An Affordable High Performance Pumping System for Gradient Capillary Liquid Chromatography

As previously noted an important part of the capillary HPLC system is the

pumping system. Convenfional HPLC pumping systems are capable of

generating constant reproducible flow rates only in the ml/min range. In order to

uses such pumping systems in the capillary scale you need to use a spilt flow

method. The commercial capillary scale pumps that are now available are

expensive and are limited to pressures around 5000 psi which limits the choice of

column lengths, particle sizes, and flow rates.

Chapter II describes an inexpensive, dual syringe, gradient pumping

system developed in this work which is capable of producing constant,

reproducible flow rates from 500 nL/min up to 30 |LiL/min with a 250 i L syringe.

Different syringe sizes can easily be used to produce flow rates from 50 nL/min

(25 |j.L syringe, 1000 msec delay, and 1 step) up to 350 |j,L/min (1 mL syringe,

10 msec delay, and 10 steps). The upper pressure limit of the system is over

10,000 psi, which is over double that of the commercial conventional or capillary

scale pumps. System performance is demonstrated using 3 capillary columns

Page 19: EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE A …

that were packed in-house. Reproducibility of the chromatographic system, in

both isocratic and gradient modes, is reported.

Hot Eluent Capillary Liguid Chromatography

Although maximum efficiency attainable with a given column (plate

counts) is commonly published very few columns are operated at maximum

efficiency due to the long elution time needed to minimize the increase in

theorefical plate height due to slow mass transfer. The required minimum

separafion time of liquid based separafion systems, unlike GC and SFC, is

usually dictated by the back pressure produced by the column. Two methods

are currenfiy used to reduce the analysis time in LC systems: (1) increase the

pressure limit of the system, or (2) decrease the back pressure produced by the

column. Jorgenson has explored the limit of high pressure by developing a

pumping system that is capable of 130,000 psi.^^ This approach, although

elegant, is limited by injector pressure limits and the physical size of the pumping

system. The second approach is to lower the back pressure produced by the

column usually accomplished by lowering the viscosity of the eluent. Several

groups have explored operating near the supercritical domain with reverse phase

eluents or modifying supercritical fluids with significant amounts of reversed

phase eluents to dramatically lower eluent viscosity. This is an interesting

technique with limited commercial acceptance due to the complexity of the

system required to keep the mixed eluent at or near the supercritical state.

10

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Chapter III explores the use of high temperatures along with the high

pressure pumping system to accomplish efficient high-speed separations. The

use of high temperatures lowers the viscosity of the eluent so that at maximum

practical pressures, the system can operate at a very high linear velocity. Also,

due to an increase in the diffusion coefficient, the deterioration of the plate height

at high linear velocities is ameliorated. Separations are performed at

temperatures up to 200 °C, back pressures up to 10,000 psi, and flow rates up to

25 ^L/min. A separation of several alkylbenzenes is performed in less than 2

minutes.

High-Pressure. High-Speed. Superheated Water Eluent. Capillary Liguid Chromatography

A modern day laboratory has to deal with many issues that were not

present 10 years ago. The environmental impact of organic solvents and its

economic consequences have led many research groups to explore methods to

limit or to eliminate the consumption of these solvents which can be harmful to

health and expensive to dispose of. One of the advantages of the capillary scale

is the dramatic decrease in the consumpfion of these organic modifiers. In 1995

Hawthorne and co-workers demonstrated another alternative. They showed that

supercritical water at temperatures of 400 °C and pressures of 350 bar can be

used as a replacement for organic solvents for extraction.^°'^^ This discovery

lead to the use of very hot water as an eluent for reverse phase liquid

chromatography (RPLC).^^ Although the capillary scale has not previously been

11

Page 21: EXPLORATIONS IN CAPILLARY REVERSE PHASE A …

used to perform separations using superheated water as an eluent, the small

scale should prove to be ideal due to the excellent thermal conductivity and low

thermal mass.

Chapter IV reports on the use of a high pressure, capillary scale, reverse

phase liquid chromatography system that uses superheated water as an eluent

to separate non-polar alkylbenzene derivatives. Separafions are shown on 180

)am columns packed with 3 jxm zirconia particles modified with elemental carbon

or polybutadiene at temperatures up to 400 °C. A high speed separation is

shown separating six benzene derivatives in less than 100 seconds.

12

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13

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42. D.J. Bornhop, N.J. Dovichi, Anal. Chem., 59, (1987), 1632.

43. T. Takeuchi, T. Asano, D. Ishii, J. Chromatogr, 471, (1989), 297.

44. J. G. White, R. L. St. Claire, and J.W. Jorgenson., Anal. Chem., 58, (1986), 293.

45. L. A. Knecht, E. J. Guthrie, and J. W. Jorgenson, Anal. Chem., 56, (1984), 479.

46. S. Rokushika, Z. Lian Sun, and H. Hatano, J. Chromatogr, 253, (1982), 87

47. H. Wu, T.L. Peck, A.G. Webb, R.L. Magin, J.V. Sweedler., Anal Chem., 66, (1994), 3849.

48. R. Trones, A. Tangen, W. Lund, T. Greibrokk., J Chromatogr 835, (1999), 105.

49. D. J. Miller and S.B. Hawthorne, Anal Chem. 69, (1997), 623.

50. S. B. Hawthorne, Y. Yang, D. J. Miller, Anal Chem., 66, (1994), 2912.

51. Y. Yang, S. Bowadt, S. B. Hawthorne, and D. J. Miller, Anal Chem., 67, (1995), 4571.

52. D. J. Miller, S. B. Hawthorne, Anal Chem., 69, (1997), 623.

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CHAPTER II

AN AFFORDABLE HIGH PERFORMANCE PUMPING SYSTEM FOR

GRADIENT CAPILLARY LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY

Introduction

Since the fundamental work of Howard and Martin^ nearly 50 years ago,

reverse phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) has grown to become one of the

most widely used liquid phase separation methods. RPLC has been used

successfully in diverse applicafions ranging from the separation and purification

of peptides and the determination of protein structures,^ to purity analysis in

quality controP'* and process monitoring.^ RPLC is a broadly applicable

technique that can use many different combinations of columns and eluents to

analyze a variety of sample types. Gradient elufion capability adds a great deal

to such systems in terms of fiexibility, separafion efficiency, and analysis time.

The advantages of moving from conventional HPLC into the capillary

domain have been known for over 20 years. As shown by Ishii,^ these benefits

include lower solvent and sample consumpfion, greatly increased mass

sensitivity, and higher peak efficiencies. A conventional scale LC instrument

consumes nearly 500 L of eluent a year; a capillary system can be run for a year

with what would be consumed in one day by a conventional system. This allows

the use of expensive (ultrapure, deuterated, etc.), exotic (e.g., chiral), or toxic

and even environmentally hazardous solvents in the capillary domain. Many

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current biological invesfigations are carried out in a scale that provides an

amount of sample sufficient only for analysis by capillary based systems.

Hyphenated analysis methods, especially LC-MS, proven invaluable in the

characterizafion of proteins and peptides in complex mixtures, are particularly

well suited to the capillary scale. LC-MS is also indispensable in drug

development where peak confirmation can be legally mandated.'^ Operation at

the capillary scale not only improves the performance of an LC-MS interface, but

it makes the use of a buffered mobile phase without complex desalting

procedures possible and generally greatly reduces the ion source fouling

problems.®'

Finally, the small power and space requirements make capillary HPLC an

ideal candidate for portability. A portable instrument needs to be light and

compact, have manageable power requirements, and match the performance of

the convenfional counterpart. Capillary scale instrumentation should be

inherently compact due to the small ancillary components needed (although this

still remains a wishful thought for the optical detectors in use); in particular, the

power requirements for the pumping system are very low (less than 1 mW of

power is needed to pump 1 |j,L/min at 4000 psi).

Unfil fairly recently, hardware for capillary LC was not plentiful. At the

present time, nanoliter-scale valves and packed capillary microcolumns are

commercially available. In the wake of popular interest in capillary

electrophoresis (CE), capillary-scale opfical detectors have been much improved

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in terms of their sensitivity and are also widely available. The cost remains

relatively high; affordable dedicated wavelength alternatives were previously

described by this laboratory.^" Relative to the detectors, there are far fewer

vendors that offer a gradient pumping system capable of nL-|aL/min flow rates;

the available products are expensive.

This paper describes a capillary-scale liquid delivery system based on two

independent syringe pumps. The pumps are controlled by custom software and

are capable of reproducible gradients at constant ^L/min flow-rates.

Experimental

The system layout is shown in Figure 2.1. The pumps are 48 000 step,

motor driven syringe-type dispensers (Model 50300, Kloehn Inc., Reno, NV) that

operate under internal jiProcessor control or can be controlled by serial port

connecfion from a personal computer (PC). Any PC capable of running

Windows™ (3.1 or higher, Microsoft, Redmond, WA) is suitable.

A stainless steel (type 316) block was machined in-house with

appropriately sized ports to accommodate a low leak dual ball and seat inlet

check valve (P/N 44541, Dionex Corp., Sunnyvale, CA), the threaded head of the

syringe, and a liquid outlet port. A small volume (25 mL) glass vial functioned as

the eluent reservoir. It was affixed next to the syringe dispenser and was

connected to the check valve with Teflon tubing. Porous polypropylene inlet

filters (nominal pore size 20 i m) were used in each solvent reservoir.

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Glass syringes are commonly available and can be used up to -1000 psi ^

but the present applicafion requires higher pressures. Stainless steel syringes

were constructed in-house (Figure 2.2). The syringe barrel is a stainless steel

cylinder. We ufilized commonly available 316 grade stainless steel column blank

used for packing HPLC columns, (2.1 mm i. d., 6.35 mm o. d., cut to a 83 mm

length); it need not be polished internally. The pistons are 1.27 mm dia. 316

stainless steel rods press fit into a metal stub that attaches to the pump

movement. The syringe is of the end-seal type. A Teflon® high-pressure seal

was made by machining polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) stock to the appropriate

dimensions (5.56 mm o. d., 1.27 mm i. d., and 11.4 mm long) and press fitting it

into the bottom of the barrel and the end cap by tightening the end-cap. We have

used end caps that were machined in-house from aluminum, any suitable

material can be used since the end cap is not a wetted part. The Teflon® piece

molds itself into the correct shape under pressure to form a high-pressure seal.

Similar other applicafions, in which a piece of Teflon® cold-flows to form a seal

are in the literature; pieces of PTFE tubes can be used as ferrules, for example.^^

Because of the end-seal design, the syringe acts as a displacement pump where

the displacement volume is dependent on the piston rod diameter and not the

barrel internal diameter. This design also obviates the need for having a

polished barrel. With a 1.27 mm dia. piston rod, the total displacement is 76 ^L

for the maximum linear travel of 60 mm allowed by the pump.

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A pressure sensor (0-10000 psi, model SP70-A10000, Senso-Metrics,

Simi Valley, CA) was connected to the liquid output port of the stainless steel

block on pump A using 0.25 mm i. d. stainless steel or fused silica tubing. The

column back-pressure was confinuously monitored to insure proper system

performance. For isocratic or gradient eluent production in the capillary HPLC

system, the output from pump A and pump B were coupled to a tee (microvolume

tee, MT.5XCS6, VaIco Instruments, Houston, TX). The tee is connected to the

injector via a 400 ixm id . 2 cm long stainless steel tube that functions as a 2 fxL

volume mixing chamber. To produce a constant flow rate in the gradient mode,

custom software was written in Microsoft Visual Basic® and provided the user

interface for instrument control. During actual pump operation, the pump does

not need the PC, and the latter is completely free to execute other tasks.

An electrically actuated injection valve equipped with a 20 nL internal

sample loop (VaIco Instruments, Houston, TX) was connected to the mixing

chamber and used for sample introduction. The injector is rated by the

manufacture to have a pressure limit of 7000 psi.

The analytical columns used were 360 im o.d. and 180 |Lim i.d. fused

silica capillaries (Polymicro Technologies, Phoenix, AZ) packed in-house. Two

columns were - 50 cm long and were packed with reverse phase 5 ^m PRP-1

(Hamilton Co., Reno, NV) and 5 i m Adsorbosphere HS C-18 (Alltech Associates,

Deerfield, IL) particles, respectively. A third column was 12 cm in length and

packed with ZirChrom-PBD, a Zr02-based 3 inm dia. packing (ZirChrom

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Separafions, Anoka, MN). A frit was made by packing glass wool (-0.25 mm

thick bed) in a nominally 0.3 mm i.d., 1.6 mm o.d. PTFE tube which served as a

butt-joint connector between the column and a 75 |am i.d., 365 |um o.d. fused

silica exit capillary. The silica tubes must be force fitted into the PTFE sleeve,

the frictional resistance is sufficient to prevent uncoupling from the connector.

Detection was made through a window created on the exit capillary, 4 cm from

the frit.

All columns were packed by a slurry packing technique. For the 5 i m

PRP-1, a 10 w/v% slurry in methanol was used with the slurry reservoir in a

sonicator. The pressure was increased from 0 to 6000 psi in 10 min and

maintained at that pressure for 24 hours. For the Adsorbosphere HS CI 8, the

packing material was air dried, slurried in acetone (3.6% w/w), sonicated for 10

min, shaken for 2 hours on a mechanical shaker and transferred to the slurry

reservoir. The slurry was stirred throughout the packing process. Methanol was

used as the push solvent. The initial pressure was set to 100 psi, and after the

back pressure increased beyond 100 psi, it was set to 1000 psi. From there it

was increased in 150 psi increments to 5000 psi and held at that pressure for 15

hours. For the 3 |Lim ZirChrom-PBD, a 10 w/v% slurry was made in 10 mM

aqueous sodium dodecyl sulfate containing 10% glycerol. The slurry reservoir

was constantly agitated and the pressure was increased from 0 to 7000 psi in 2

minutes. The pressure was maintained at 7000 psi for 24 h.

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A Linear model UVIS 200 absorbance detector (Spectra-Physics /

Thermoseparation systems), designed for on-column detection with capillaries,

was used for detection. A detection wavelength of 254 nm was used in all work.

Results and Discussion

There are two popular methods to achieve constant flow rates in the low

or sub-|j,L/min scale: (a) Conversion of conventional systems to operate in the

correct flow rate range and (b) the use of syringe pump based system.^^.

Modificafion of conventional systems usually requires the use of a flow-splitter,^'*

which directs the majority of the flow to waste and fonwards a |al/min flow rate to

the column. This approach fails to reduce solvent consumption and flow can

vary with the changing viscosity of the eluent during gradient operation.

The use of a syringe based pumping system for a dedicated capillary

scale pump is attractive because such pumps deliver pulseless flow in the flow

rate range required by a capillary LC system. The flrst commercial syringe

pumps for use with microbore or larger capillary columns were introduced by

Brownlee Labs. Dual syringes of 10 mL volume were used with the seal at the

usual place, the head of the plunger and an acfive motor driven valve to switch

between refill and dispense modes.^^ The minimum recommended flow rate for

gradient applicafions was 10 |j,L/min and the minimum attainable fiow rate was 1

)LiL/min. The original pressure limit of 5000 psi was upgraded to 5500 psi after

the pump was sold under the Applied Biosystems name.^^ The present Perkin-

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Elmer model 140 D pump^^ is derived from the original Brownlee MPLC pump

design, it uses 2.5 mL volume syringes with useful flow rate ranges of 2-100

|j,L/min and a pressure limit of 5000 psi.

The fundamental problem with designs that put the pump seal at the head

of the plunger is that it is difficult to reduce the plunger diameter (and therefore

the total available displacement volume) past a certain point, because of the

difficulty of machining a seal. In addition, polishing the interior of a narrow

syringe barrel can also be demanding. In contrast, the presently developed

pumps with end-seals enable reproducible flow rates down to 500 nL/min with

the stated plunger diameter and will allow smaller flow rates with a smaller

diameter plunger and a smaller volume mixing chamber. The pressure capability

is better than any of the commercial pumps cited above. At under 8 lbs, it is a

fraction of the weight of the original 45 lbs. Brownlee Pump.*^

The performance of the syringe and seal design was examined by

connecting the output of pump A to one side of the pressure gauge and the

output of pump B to the other side of the pressure gauge. The closed system

was then pressurized, the pumps were shut off and the pressure was monitored.

It took 1 h for the pressure in the system to drop from 4030 to 3960 psi (1.75%

change). The pressure dropped to 3550 and 3200 psi in 8 and 24 h,

respectively. This corresponds to a leak rate of 700 pL/min, this can probably be

attributed entirely to the leakage through the two check valves. In actual use

configurafion, the system has been pressure tested to 8000 psi, the injector.

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which is pressure rated by the manufacturer to 7000 psi, leaks past this point. By

shutting off the tee output to the injector by a plug, we have pressurized the

system to the maximum limit of the pressure gauge (10000 psi) and verified the

pumping system itself holds pressure at this point with very low leak rates as

menfioned above. If suitable injectors were available, it is likely that this simple

pump design can be adapted for use at even higher pressures. The pressure

stability of the system under more typical operating conditions is shown in Figure

2.3.

The performance of the mixing chamber and the dual pump system were

tested by comparing the retention time relative standard deviation (RSD) of the

dual pump system to that of a single syringe pump system (same system as here

with only one operafing pump containing a premixed eluent) under othenwise

identical conditions. The average RSD of retention fimes for an 8 component

mixture was 0.825% (n= 30) with the dual pump system operating to produce a

constant eluent composifion throughout the run. Using only a single syringe

pump pumping the same eluent, the average RSD of retention times was actually

0.921% (n= 30). The fact that the dual pump system has a lower average RSD

indicates that the main source of retention irreproducibility is not from the

pumping system.

The isocratic evaluafion of the system was performed on the PRP-1

column with samples of biochemical/biological interest. A solution of 100 mM

ammonium formate (pH 4.25) was filled in pump A and the same solufion

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containing 10% acetonitrile was filled in pump B. Figure 2.4 illustrates system

reproducibility for isocrafic elufion of 8 sample components with a 50:50 A and B

mix. Figure 2.5 shows the same analytes separated under gradient condifions.

The concentration (|aM) (and mass, pg) detection limits computed based on the

S/N=3 criterion for the gradient analysis are as follows: Cytosine 5.4 ]xM (12 pg),

Uracil 6.8 i M (15 pg). Adenine 11.2 ^M (30 pg). Uridine 2 (xM (10 pg), Thymidine

6.7 ^M (32 pg). Adenosine 5.4 |aM (32 pg), Xanthosine 11.5 |uM (74 pg), and

Inosine 7.6 |LIM (41 pg).

The gradient capabilities of the system were examined by separafing a

series of benzene derivatives on the HSC-18 column. Pump A contained a

mixture of acetonitrile and water (50:50); pump B contained only acetonitrile.

Figure 2.6 shows four overlaid sample chromatograms. The overall performance

of a pumping system is ultimately judged by its ability to provide reproducible

gradient elution, in terms of solvent flow rate and temporal composition. The

average retention fimes (n = 6) and the % RSD values for the individual analytes

in a 10-component mixture separated on the HSC-18 column were as follows:

phenol (5.06 min, 1.28%), benzaldehyde (5.91 min, 0.80%), benzonitrile (6.08,

0.72%), nitrobenzene (6.40 min, 0.64%), benzene (6.83 min, 0.52%),

bromobenzene (7.28 min, 0.37%), toluene (7.40 min, 0.33%), ethylbenzene (7.65

min, 0.30%), propylbenzene (8.16 min, 0.24%) and f-butylbenzene (8.30 min,

0.24%). The average RSD of retenfion fimes under gradient condifions was

0.545%. This corresponds to a variation of 2.05 (+ .88) seconds for 10 peaks

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elufing in - 8.5 minutes. It is interesfing that note that the absolute standard

deviation itself decreases with retention time in an exponential fashion, -

log(standard deviation) is linearly correlated with the retention time with a

correlation coefficient of 0.9928. Column re-equlibrafion between gradient runs

require -5 min.

CE is presently one of the most actively researched areas in separation

science. While very large efficiencies are often reported for CE separations,

there is no equivalent of gradient elufion in CE. Although peak efficiencies are

not usually computed for gradient mode separations in chromatography because

intrinsic column efficiencies of different columns cannot be compared in this

manner, we feel that the most valid way to compare separation efficiencies

between the two techniques is to nevertheless compare in terms of the effective

plate numbers obtained during gradient elufion, the most common mode of LC

practice. In the chromatogram of Figure 2.6, the maximum peak efficiency was

observed for toluene, which exhibited 168 500 theoretical plates in the gradient

mode. The average peak efficiency for the 10 components was 111 000

theoretical plates. This correlates to an average of 14 000 plates per minute.

The plate counts for each peak under the gradient run conditions are as follows:

phenol (16 500), benzaldehyde (34 000), benzonitrile (89 500), nitrobenzene (131

000), benzene (167 500), bromobenzene (142 500), toluene (168 500),

ethylbenzene (125 000), propylbenzene (133 000), and t-butylbenzene (101 500).

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For small molecules with substanfial diffusion coefficients, this is comparable to

CE efficiencies.

Fast separations were investigated with the short ZirChrom-PBD column

with 3 fxm packing, at a relafively fast flow rate. Five benzene derivatives could

be separated in less than 2 min (Figure 2.7).

In summary, we have described here a gradient capable pumping system

for capillary LC. With a fabrication cost under $3000, this would be affordable by

most laboratories interested in exploring this excifing area.

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Literature Cited

1. G. A. Howard and A. J. P. Martin, Biochem. J. 46, (1950), 532.

2. J. F. Hancock, W. Henzel, and C. S. Horvath, HPLC of Biological Macromolecules, Methods and Applications; K. M. Gooding and F. E. Regnier, Eds. Marcel Dekker: New York, 1990. p 145.

3. S. Borman, Anal. Chem. 59, (1987), 969A.

4. R. L. Garnick, N. J. Solli and P. A. Papa, Anal. Chem. 60, (1988), 2546.

5. P. A. De Phillips, S. Yamazaki, F. S. Leu, B. C. Buckland, K. Gbevonyu, and R. D. Sitrin, Proceedings of the 9'" International Meeting on HPLC of Proteins, Polypeptides, and Polynucleotides; Philadelphia, November 1989, Paper No. 501.

6. D. Ishii, K. Asai, K. Hibi, T. Yonokuchi, and M. Nagaya, J. Chromatogr 144, (1977), 157.

7. Y. Hieda, S. Kashimura, K. Hara and M. Kageura, J. Chromatogr. 667, (1995),

241

8. A. Cappiello and F. Bruner, Anal. Chem. 65, (1993), 1281.

9. A. Cappiello, and G. Famiglini, Anal. Chem. 69, (1997), 5136.

10. C. B. Boring and P. K. Dasgupta, Anal. Chim. Acta., 342, (1997), 123. 11. C. B. Boring, P. K. Dasgupta and A. Sjogren, J. Chromatogr 804, (1988),

45.

12. J. L. Meek, Anal. Chem., 56, (1984), 1752.

13. F. Andreolini and A. Trisciani, J. Chromatogr Sci., 28, (1990), 54.

14. S. Van Der Wal and F.J. Yang, J. High Resolut. Chromatogr Chromatogr Commun,. 6, (1983), 216.

15. MPLC Micropump Technical Note 923. October, 1983. Brownlee Labs Inc., Santa, Clara, CA.

28

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16. MicroGradient™ System: High Performance Microbore LC Product Bulletin 804. September, 1987. Applied Biosystems, Santa Clara Analytical Division, CA.

17. http://www2.perkin-elmer.com/pa/347203/347203.html

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I '

Pump A

6547 PSI

Mixing Chamber ^ .„ UV Detector

Capillary Pressure >s I /rrs. Column

I I

PumpB

o

Computer

Figure 2.1 Layout of the capillary HPLC system.

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^ Syringe barrel

[I ^ Teflon high pn\ pressure seal

Aluminum end cap

^ Stub (connects to motor drive)

Figure 2.2. Stainless steel syringe end seal design.

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3000

2500

Q. 2000

3 1500 (/)

^ 1000

500

0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Time, min

Figure 2.3. Pressure stability during a typical isocratic run. 75% acetonitrile in water

flowing at 5 |j,L/min, through a 5 inm C-18 silica column.

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0.01 AU

0 2 4 6 8 10 12

Time (min)

Figure 2.4 Illustrative isocratic system reproducibility. RSD in retention fime is

<1%. All analytes are 500 pM, 20 nL injecfion. 5-(xm PRP-1 column, 2 (iL/min. Peak identities from left to right: cytosine, uracil, adenine,

uridine, thymidine, adenosine, xanthosine, and inosine.

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0.005 AU

Figure 2.5 Gradient chromatogram for the same sample and same column as in Figure 2.4.

Flow 2 laL/min.

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m 98% c

85%^ 75%^ 65% o

CO

60% o

CD

-| r-

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Tinne (min)

Figure 2.6 Illustrative gradient reproducibility, 5 |4,m C-18 silica column, flow 5 \x\Jm'm. Average RSD in peak retention time is 0.545%. Amounts injected are as follows: peaks 1-3: -100 pg, 4: 120 pg, 5, 7-10: 85 pg, 6: 150 pg. Peak identities from left to right: (1) phenol, (2) benzaldehyde, (3) benzonitrile,

(4) nitrobenzene, (5) benzene, (6) bromobenzene, (7) toluene, (8) ethylbenzene, (9) propylbenzene, and (10) t-butylbenzene.

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0.005 AU

1. Benzaldehyde 2. Nitrobenzene 3. Benzene 4. Toluene 5. Ethylbenzene

I I , — — r — T — y — — I — I [ I I —I r I r 1 r

2.5 3.0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 Tinne, nnin

Figure 2.7. Chromatogram on a 12 cm long ZirChrom-PBD column, flow rate 6.3 pL/min, 6500 psi. All samples were in 75% acetonitrile, 25% water. Before injection, the eluent is 37% ACN, at injection it is switched to 55% ACN. The time for

the step change in gradient to reach the head of the column is - 30 seconds. -100 pg of each analyte is injected.

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CHAPTER III

HOT ELUENT CAPILLARY LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY

Introduction

In liquid chromatographic separations that demand either high speed or

high efficiency, mobile phase viscosities ultimately govern what can be attained.

Cui and Olesik added CO2 to a methanol/water eluent to dramatically lower the

viscosity; however, a more complex system was required.^ The other obvious

means to lower eluent viscosity is to increase temperature. Due to the excellent

thermal conductivity of silica, the small dimensions and the resulting small

thermal mass, high temperature liquid chromatography (HTLC) will be most

suitable in the capillary scale.^ Takeuchi et al. first demonstrated HTLC but this

was in a open tubular format where the thermal stability of the stafionary phase

bonded to the silica column surface is a major problem.^ Dynamic coating of the

capillary can sometimes be used, but it is not a general solution.'* Packed

column capillary HTLC has been explored by several investigators. Sheng et al.

studied capillary HTLC at temperatures approaching 100 °C.^ Trones et al. have

studied the applicability of various detectors to reversed phase separations,

using octadecyl silica up to temperatures of 150 °C. "^ Present silica based

packings are more thermally stable than the older packings which degraded at

temperatures under 100 °C.^ However, at temperatures well above 100 °C,

degradation due to the increased solubility of silica in water can still be a

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problem. Zirconia based packings have exceptional thermal stability, they are

reported to be stable at least up to 200 °C.^° Although conventional scale HTLC

studies using zirconia based packings have been reported, performance at the

upper temperature limits remains an unknown.^^'^^ At this time no studies, to our

knowledge, are available on titania-based packings; they too would be expected

to be thermally stable.

In the present study, we have investigated the utility of capillary HTLC

using zirconia and titania based stationary phases to separate alkyl benzene

derivatives using an acetonitrile-water eluent at pressures up to 10,000 psi and

operating temperatures up to 200 °C.

Experimental

Instrument

The system layout shown in Figure 3.1 is similar to that described in

Chapter II. The outputs from pump A and pump B were coupled via 0.25 mm i.d.

stainless steel tubing to a four way cross (microvolume cross, MX1XCS6, VaIco

Instruments, Houston, TX). The third port of the union is connected to the injector

via a 300 ^m i.d. 2 cm long stainless steel tube that functions as a 1.4 [iL volume

mixing chamber. The pressure sensor (0-10000 psi, model SP70-A10000,

Senso-Metrics, Simi Valley, CA) is connected to the fourth port of the union using

0.25 mm i. d. stainless steel tubing.

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A newly designed electrically actuated injection valve equipped with a 20

nL internal sample loop (model C2XL, VaIco Instruments, Houston, TX) was

connected to the mixing chamber and used for sample introduction. This new

injector design has a pressure limit of 12,000 psi. This extraordinary pressure

limit is obtained by passing the pressurized eluent behind the internal loop rotor

before flowing through the sample loop. As the pressure increases more force is

applied to the rotor sealing surface. The preheated eluent passes through the

injector thus heating the injector. To prevent the sample from boiling before

injection, the injector loop was cooled externally by closed-loop pumping of cold

ethanol through 2.5 mm i.d. flexible tubing (Tygon, S-50-HL) wrapped around the

sample loop casing with a variable-speed pump drive (Model 75225, Cole

Parmer, Vernon Hills, IL). The cooling loop incorporated a 100 ml vial

submerged in an ice bath. Due to the limited residence time in the injector, the

preheated eluent cools very little while passing through the cooled injector.

The analytical column was housed in a custom heating enclosure

consisting of a 450 |xm i.d. stainless steel tube into which the column was

inserted. A heating tape surrounded the stainless steel tube. A layer of

aluminum foil, an 1-inch thick layer of glass wool, and another layer of aluminum

foil then complete the heating enclosure. The temperature was monitored by a

platinum RTD in contact with the steel tube and is controlled by a temperature

controller (Micromega CN770, Omega Engineering, Stamford, CT).

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An absorbance detector (Linear UVIS 200, Spectra-

Physics/Thermoseparation systems), designed for on-column detection with

capillaries, was used for detection. A detection wavelength of 254 or 195 nm

was used in all work. In order to keep the superheated eluent from boiling while

passing through the detector, 10 jxm id . capillaries of variable lengths were used

to maintain a back pressure of 1000 - 2000 psi at the detector exit.

Analytical columns

The analytical columns used were 360 ^m o.d. and 180 ^m i.d. fused

silica capillaries (Polymicro Technologies, Phoenix, AZ) packed in-house.

Results are described herein for two column types: (a) a 25 cm long column

packed with polybutadiene coated ZrOa-based 3 |j,m dia. packing, ZirChrom-PBD

(ZirChrom Separafions, Anoka, MN), (b) a 15 cm long column packed with 3 inm

dia. C18-modifiedTi02.

Frits were made at the column outlet with a procedure based on a method

developed by Kennedy and Jorgenson.^^ The fused silica tubing was taped end

downward onto a pile of 5 )Lim silica particles until a 0.5 mm section was packed.

Since about a 10 cm section is required after the frit for a detection window and

exit plumbing, the silica particles were pushed about 10 cm into the column by

using a 150 (xm o.d. 10 )xm i.d. silica capillary as a plunger. This process was

repeated several times until the frit was - 2.5 mm long. Once the particles were

in place and the bed was of the desired length, the bed was sintered to form a frit

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by passing the section of the column containing the frit through a small propane

flame 2-3 times. Frit robustness was tested prior to packing by producing a 5000

psi pressure drop across the frit. The sintering process also produces a 1 cm

detection window directly after the frit.

A slurry packing technique was used to pack both types of columns. A 10

w/y% slurry of either the zirconia or titania based packing in 10% aqueous Triton

X-100 was used. The slurry was agitated and a portion was transferred to the

slurry reservoir. The columns were then packed using a Shandon (Shandon

Southern Instruments Inc., Model 628 x51, Sewickley, PA) HPLC packing pump,

using water as the packing liquid. During the packing process, the slurry

reservoir was constantly agitated and the pressure was increased from 0 to 7000

psi in 1 minute. Due to the large pressure drop produced when packing 3 (xm

particles, the entire column was placed in a 0.6 mm stainless steel tube that was

heated with heating tape to 200 °C. The increased temperature greatly

decreased the viscosity of the packing solvent thus allowing much (3-4 times)

longer columns to be packed than what was possible when packing at room

temperature. After the desired column length was achieved, the packed column,

in the case of the zirconia based particles, was then placed in an ultrasonic bath

and sonicated for 3 hours with the column under 7000 psi. The titania based

packing was not placed into the ultrasonic bath due to potential fragmentation

risks. The pressure was then maintained at 7000 psi for 24 h.

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We prefer not to use frits at the head of the column. This configuration

allows the front of the column to be trimmed if compression of packing material

over a period of time leads to a void at the head of the column.

Materials and reagents

Acetonitrile (HPLC grade) was obtained from EM Science (Gibbstown,

NJ). Water was distilled then purified in a Barnstead Nanopure system. All

fused silica capillaries were from Polymicro Technologies, inc. (Phoenix, AZ).

Benzaldehyde, toluene, ethylbenzene (all from J. T. Baker), benzene (EM

Science), n-propylbenzene (Ethyl Corporation), n-butylbenzene, n-amylbenzene,

1-phenylhexane and 1-phenylheptane (all from Sigma-Aldrich) were used as

received.

Results and Discussion

Dependence of viscosity on temperature

There is very limited data in the literature on the viscosity of mixed liquid

systems, especially above their normal boiling temperature. Since

acetonitrile:water is probably the most commonly used LC eluent, we measured

the viscosity of an eluent that was prepared at room temperature to be 50%

acetonitrile and 50% water (v/v). The temperature dependence of the viscosity of

the eluent was measured by monitoring the pressure drop through a narrow bore

capillary. The eluent was pumped at 0.5 |aL/min through a 32 cm long 9 jj.m i.d.

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fused silica capillary placed in the column heater, followed by a second capillary

maintained at room temperature that prevented boiling. Low volume flow-

through pressure gauges were placed both at the head and tail of the

measurement capillary. The differential pressure between the two pressure

transducers was used to compute the viscosity according to the Hagen-Poiseuille

equation.^'*'^^ The results are shown in Figure 3.2. The viscosity r| decreases

exponentially with absolute temperature according to:^^

T1=A exp (E / RT) (3.1)

where A is a constant and E is the effective activation energy for molecular

displacement. For our data. In r\ is plotted against 1/T, a straight line is obtained

with a linear r value of 0.9999. The best fit values for A and E are, respectively,

0.2097 cP and 16.59 kJ/mol. This data, shown in Figure 3.2, shows an order of

magnitude decrease of viscosity between ambient temperature and 200 °C; this

would allow a proportionately increased flow rate or column length.

Chromatographic performance

The performance of the zirconia based packing as well as the durability of

the packing at high temperature was verified. Destructive studies were

performed to determine the onset of failure. While long-term testing showed that

both packing and capillary are stable at 200 °C and can operate for long periods

if undisturbed, the capillary itself becomes brittle after several days at 200 °C. It

is possible that this embrittlement is caused by the degradation of the polyimide

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coating and aluminized capillaries, as used in high temperature gas

chromatography will provide greater handling durability. However, by about 300

°C, dissolution of silica from the interior wall of the column leads to catastrophic

failure of the capillary in approximately 15 hours, typically exhibiting picturesque

helical cracking patterns. At 400 °C, the Zirchrom-PBD packing lifetime is

shortened to < 1 h, likely due to the decomposition of the bonded PBD.

The effect of temperature on column performance was studied for the

separation of a series of alkybenzenes on the Zirconia-PBD phase with the

above 50% acetonitrile-50% water eluent. The temperature of the system was

varied from 25-200 °C in 25 °C increments. The performance of the column at

different temperatures was evaluated by comparing the retention time, theoretical

plate count, and peak asymmetries for each peak. By any of these measures,

the separation improved continuously with increasing temperature from 25-175

°C with an apparent small drop in performance past this temperature.

The reduction in the retention time is shown in Figure 3.3 and follows the

trend reported by others. In our judgment, the reduced retention is likely best

interpreted in terms of the solvophobic theory of Sinanoglu and Pullman as

adapted later to reverse phase liquid chromatography by Horvath et al. ' ' ^

An increase in temperature also increases the diffusion coefficients of the

mobile phase and the analytes. According to the Stokes-Einstein relafionship,

the diffusion coefficient is proportional directly to the absolute temperature and

the reciprocal of the viscosity:^^

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Dm=D, ,25(T/298)(Tl25/Tl) (3.2)

Where Dm,25 and T125 are the molecular diffusivity and the viscosity of the eluent at

25 °C. The value of 6.1 x 10'^ cm^/s was used for Dm,25 of the 50% acetonitrile

50% water eluent.^° Figure 3.4 shows the estimated change of the diffusion

coefficient as a function of temperature based on the measured viscosity data.

Enhanced mass transfer due to increased diffusivity will be expected to

significantly improve the quality of the separafions. Figure 3.5 shows the

separation of 4 benzene derivatives as a function of temperature at the same

flow rate; the separafion improves dramatically as the temperature is increased

from 25-200 °C. Figure 3.6 shows Knox plots for ethylbenzene at four different

temperatures.^^ It is interesting to note that the best efficiency at the opfimum

velocity at each temperature in the 25-200 °C range actually deteriorates with

increasing temperature. Molander et al. made similar observations with a 5 ^m

Hypersil-ODS™ stationary phase at temperatures up to 175 °C, noting that the

efficiency at the optimal linear velocity actually decreases above 100 °C. ^ This

was hypothesized to be due to extra-column dispersion. In the present study,

detection occurs on-column immediately after the column frit; extra-column band

broadening is not likely to be a major factor in the observed column efficiency.

An alternative possibility is that the contribution of sites accessible through

very small pores becomes more significant as the eluent viscosity is decreased

and/or due to actual thermal expansion of the packing. An alternative way of

stating this is that in regard to the accessibility of its adsorption sites, the packing

45

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becomes more heterogeneous at higher operating temperatures. Consider the

A, B, and C terms in the Knox equafion for ethylbenzene as a funcfion of

temperature (Figure 3.7). The B and C terms behave predictably, as may be

expected from the positive temperature dependence of diffusivity. The A-term,

however, shows a -25% increase between 100 and 150 °C; this is consistent

with increased heterogeneity of the accessible sites.

Figure 3.7 also highlights the fact that it is the decrease in the C term that

becomes the determinant of the plate height at higher linear velocities while at

the lower velocities, the plate height is mostly affected by the increase in the A

and B terms. Of particular importance to high speed separations, the loss of

efficiency with increasing velocity is less in the 100-200 °C range than at ambient

temperature.

Thermodynamic data

The standard enthalpy and entropy of the solute transfer were calculated

from the slope and intercept of the Van't Hoff plots respectively.^^ The calculated

AH° and (AS°) values for benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and propylbenzene

were (in J/mol and and J/ °K, respectively), -4046 (-12.93),-4081 (-11.79), -4183

(-10.84), and -4383 (-9.954). The absolute values of the entropy terms are

dependent on the precise value of the Vs/Vm ratio; however, the relative patterns

of the enthalpy and entropy terms are worthy of closer inspection. The

enthalpies of adsorption on the stationary phase increases exponentially with

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increasing alkyl chain length. The observed data can be fitted to a relation of the

type:

Enthalpy (J/mol) = 17.5 exp (alkyl chain carbon number) + 4037 (3.3)

The predicted enthalpies then correlate with the experimental enthalpies with a

linear ^ value of 0.9998.

Regarding the entropy terms, it is not surprising that the system is more

organized when the solute is in the stationary phase because the association of

the solute with the solvent is likely much smaller. It is interesting, however, that

the entropy change decreases from benzene to the higher homologs.

High temperature gradient chromatography

Ultimately, the important advantage of a system like this is the ability to

perform rapid separafions. The particular advantage of the capillary scale is

operation at very high linear velocities without consuming large amounts of

eluent. Figure 3.8a shows an isocratic separation of various benzene

derivatives. Even at 200 °C and a relatively high linear velocity (a flow rate of 3.5

I L/min corresponds to 2.3 mUmin through a 4.6 mm i.d. column), the isocrafic

separation took 18 min and the efficiency was unsatisfactory. In contrast. Figure

3.8b shows the same mixture separated under same temperature and fiow,

except under gradient conditions. The present system allows step changes in

solvent composition with time steps of > 6 s, allowing for sharp gradients. The

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entire separation took under 4 min, generating the equivalent of 7500 plates/min

for the last elufing peak 1-phenylheptane.

The average retention times (n = 4) and the % RSD values of the retention

times for the individual analytes in the 9-component mixture on the Zirchrom-

PBD column were as follows: benzaldehyde (1.69 min, 0.83%), benzene (1.92

min, 0.73%), toluene (2.17 min, 0.64%), ethylbenzene (2.50 min, 0.69%), n-

propylbenzene (2.95 min, 0.82%), n-butylbenzene (3.28 min, 0.88%), n-

amylbenzene (3.53 min, 0.88%), 1-phenylhexane (3.75 min, 0.80%) and 1-

phenylheptane (3.96 min, 0.92%). The average RSD in peak retenfion times is

0.79%, corresponding to a variation of 1.80 s for an elution window of -4 min.

High speed gradient chromatography

The column packed with 3 im C-18 modified Ti02 exhibited high

permeability and was particularly suitable for studying the effect of very high flow

rates. Figure 3.9 shows a gradient separafion of various alkylbenzenes at 160

°C with a flow rate of 25 ^L/min generating a back pressure - 9500 psi. The

separation took under 2 min. Note that this linear velocity is equivalent to 16

ml/min for a conventional 4.6 mm packed column, this would be impossible to

attain at ambient temperature or in conventional scale.

We have shown that attractive high-speed separations are possible in

zirconia and titania based stationary phases at temperatures up to 200 °C; this

temperature is also likely the maximum practical temperature for performing such

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separations. Capillary scale gradient HTLC for thermally stable analytes with

such packing is a viable and very attractive proposition when speed is of

paramount importance.

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Literature Cited

1. Y. Cui, S. V. Olesik, J. Chromatogr. 691 (1995) 151

2. H. Poppe, J.C. Kraak, H.H.M. Vandenberg, Chromatographia 14 (1981) 515.

3. T. Takeuchi, M. Kumaki, D. Ishii, J. Chromatogr 235 (1982) 309.

4. D. Pyo, P. K. Dasgupta, L. S. Yengoyan. Anal. Sci. 13 (SuppI) (1997) 185.

5. G. Sheng, Y. Shen, M. L. Lee, Journal of Microcolumn Separations 2 (1997) 63.

6. R. Trones, A. Iveland, T. Greibrokk, J. Microcol. Sep. 7 (1995) 505.

7. R. Trones, T. Anderson, I. Hunnes, T. Greibrokk; J. Chromatogr. A., 814 (1999)55.

8. R. Trones, A. Tangen, W. Lund, T. Greibrokk; J. Chromatogr. A., 835 (1999) 105.

9. K. D. Nugent, W. G. Burton, T. K. Slattery, B. F. Johnson, L. R. Snyder, J. Chromatogr. 443 (1988) 381.

10. J. Li, P. W. Carr, Anal. Chem. 69 (1997) 837.

11.. N. M. Djordjevic, P. W. J. Fowler, F. Houdiere, J. Microcol. Sep. 11(6) (1999)

403.

12. P. Molander, E. Ommundsen, T. Greibrokk, J. Microcol. Sep. 11(8) (1999) 612.

13. R. T. Kennedy, J. W. Jorgenson, Anal. Chem. 10 (1989) 1128.

14. F. M. White, Viscous Fluid Flow, McGraw-Hill, New York, (1978).

15. A. E. Scheidegger, The Physics of Flow Through Porous Media, University

of Toronto Press, Toronto, (1960).

16. H. Colin, J.C. Diez-Masa, G. Guiochon, J. Chromatogr. 167 (1978) 65.

17. O. Sinanoglu, B. Pullman, Molecular Associations in Biology, Academic

Press, New York, 1968, pp 427-445.

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18. Cs. Horvath, W. Melander, I. Molnar, J. Chromatogr. 125 (1976) 129.

19. F. Daniels, R. A. Alberty, Physical Chemistry, Wiley, New York, 1955. pp503-

506.

20. L. R. Snyder, J. Chromatogr. Sci. 15 (1977) 441.

21. G. H. Kennedy, J. H. Knox, J Chromatogr. 10 (1972) 549.

22. P. Molander, R. Trones, K. Haugland, T. Greibrokk, Analyst, 124 (1999) 1137.

23. S. O. Akapo, C. F. Simpson, Chromatographia, 44 (1997) 135.

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Pressure Gauge

Pump A PumpB

Column Heater UV Detector

1546 PS 5 Back Pressure Capillary

1 Pressure Gauge

Computer

Figure 3.1 Experimental set up of chromatographic system.

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300 350 400 450 500

Temperature, K

Figure 3.2 Viscosity of 50:50 v/v ACN:H20 as a function of temperature temperature.

The points represent experimental data; the best fit line is shown. The error bars on the experimental points are smaller than the dimensions of the

symbols plotted.

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16

.E 14 E - 12

i - 10

q

CD

CD

8

6

4

2 0

•— Benzene V - Toluene «— Ethylbenzene o— Propylbenzene

50 100 150 200

Temperature, C

Figure 3.3 Retention time of benzene and homologs as a function of temperature. The error bars on the experimental points are smaller than the dimensions of the

symbols plotted.

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CO CM

E o o

0 50 100 150

Temperature, C 200

Figure 3.4 Computed diffusion coefficient of the 50:50 ACN:H20 eluent as a function of

temperature. The best-fit data from Figure 2 was used to calculate D^.

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200 C

-A"^

150 C

3 < o d

100 C

25 C

JLJ\ ^ — 1 J—

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14

Time, nnin

Figure 3.5 Separations of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and propylbenzene at

four different temperatures. A flow rate of 2 ^L/min was used throughout.

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0 1 2 3 4 5 6

Reduced Linear Velocity

Figure 3.6 Knox plot of ethylbenzene at four different temperatures.

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0 50 100 150 200

Temperature, C

Figure 3.7 Knox A, B, and C terms for ethylbenzene as a funcfion of temperature.

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- « ^

2 0

10 0 z 8 0 O 6 0 'i 4 0 ^

Figure 3.8 Isocratic and gradient chromatograms of same mixture

a) Isocratic separation of (from left to right) benzaldehyde, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, n-propylbenzene, n-butylbenzene, n-amylbenzene, 1-

phenylhexane and 1-phenylheptane. A flow rate of 3.5 ^iL/min and a column temperature of 200 °C were used, b) Gradient separafion of the same

mixture, same fiow rate and temperature.

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0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0

Time, min

2.5 3.0

Figure 3.9 High-speed gradient separation on C-18 modified TiOj column of

benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, n-propylbenzene, n-butylbenzene, n-amylbenzene, 1-phenylhexane and 1-phenylheptane. Flow rate 25

laL/min; column temperature 160 °C.

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CHAPTER IV

SUPER-HOT WATER ELUENT CAPILLARY

LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY

Introduction

The environmental impact of organic solvents and the consequent

economics of their disposal has provided much impetus to limit their consumpfion

or to eliminate their use altogether. In 1995, Hawthorne et al. demonstrated that

supercritical water at 400 °C and 350 bar can be used to extract non-polar

analytes such as polycyclic aromafic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and polychlorinated

biphenyls (PCBs) from contaminated soil samples.^'^ Under these extreme

conditions, the dielectric constant of water is greatly reduced.^ Supercritical

water is a very aggressive solvent that readily oxidizes or decomposes many

substances; supercritical water treatment has been studied as a method to

decompose toxic waste.'* Throughout the temperature range above its normal

boiling point up to the supercrifical temperature, liquid water exhibits a much

lower dielectric constant than room temperature water and is likely less

aggressive than supercritical water. The dielectric constant, viscosity and

hydrogen bonding of water changes continuously from room temperature up to

supercrifical conditions; these are the properties that are likely to influence the

behavior of water as a liquid chromatographic eluent.

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Foster and Synovec were the first to exploit the use of pure water as an

LC eluent by using highly polar stationary phases and by decreasing the

stationary/mobile phase ratio. Separations could be accomplished at room

temperature but efficiencies for nonpolar analytes were modest.^ Miller and

Hawthorne first used a traditional reversed phase (in a 2 mm column format) and

utilized the temperature effect on the solvent properties of water, with thermal

gradients to 175 °C to separate alcohols, polyhydroxybenzenes, and amino

acids.^ About the same fime. Smith and Burgess separated phenols,

barbiturates, and parabens on tradifional PS-DVB and ODS-bonded silica

columns with water as hot as 200 °C.^ Yang et al. were the first to report the

separation of non-polar aromatic hydrocarbons on traditional reversed phases

using water up to 200 °C.^ It has been shown that buffering components can

also be put in the hot water eluent.^

The absence of carbon containing compounds in a pure water eluent

allows the use of detection methods that are difficult or impossible to use with

convenfional eluents. The use of a flame ionization detector (FID) can be

particularly attractive.^'^° In addition to the traditional UV/VIS detector. Smith et

aL showed the facile applicability of NMR and MS detectors to a superhot D2O

eluent LC system with temperatures to 190 °C. ^ They also authored a thorough

review documenting the manifold utility of a water eluent as hot as 240 °C.^^ One

particularly noteworthy aspect is that of many analytes investigated, very few

actually decomposed under the condifions of the separation.

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A few quesfions remain: For thermally stable analytes, what is the

practical upper limit of the separation temperature given the most thermally

stable stationary phase currently available? How fast can such separations be

carried out if one takes advantage of the decreased viscosity? We attempt to

answer these questions using an inexpensive capillary scale system. The low

flow rates and the small thermal mass in the capillary scale allow rapid

temperature ramps and greatly facilitate radial heat transfer, thus minimizing

radial temperature gradients.^^ The complexity of interfacing to detectors that are

intrinsically compatible with a low flow rate (e.g., mass spectrometers) is also

reduced. Capillary scale water eluent liquid chromatography has not been

previously reported. We report here the capillary scale separation of hydrophilic

and hydrophobic benzene derivatives at temperatures up to 400 °C and

pressures up to 11,000 psi with water as an eluent. When no backpressure is

applied at the column exit with an FID as a detector, the effluent is obviously in

the gas phase. At what point does the liquid turn into gas? Early studies of gas

chromatography with FID detectors that use steam as the mobile phase are well

known. ' Do the present separafions with FID detecfion represent gas, or liquid

phase separations, or both?

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Experimental

The pumping system shown in Figure 4.1 is similar to the home-built

gradient pumping system described in chapter 1 except that only a single pump

is required in the present work. The output from the pumping system is

connected with 0.25 mm i.d. stainless steel tubing to a high pressure inline check

valve CV (cartridge CV«3000; Upchurch scientific. Oak Harbor, WA). The check

valve housing was machined in-house out of poly(etheretherketone) (PEEK) to

handle pressures over 10,000 psi. The high-pressure side of the check valve is

then connected to a pressure sensor and gauge PG (0-10000 psi, model SP70-

A10000, Senso-Metrics, Simi Valley, CA) to confinuously monitor system

pressure.

To minimize the dissolufion of silica from the capillary wall by the superhot

water, a silica saturator (4.6 x 40 mm stainless steel guard column packed with

200 mesh silica gel) was placed ahead of the injector. A separate siliconized

band heater was used to heat the presaturator. This column was heated to a

temperature approximately 50 °C lower than the column temperature:

overheating the presaturator can result in dissolved silica subsequently

depositing in the injector which is cooler. An electrically actuated injecfion valve

equipped with a 20 nL internal sample loop (model C2XL, VaIco Instruments,

Houston, TX, rated at 15000 psi) was connected to the guard column and used

for sample introducfion. To prevent the sample from boiling before injecfion, the

injector loop was cooled externally by closed-loop pumping of cold ethanol from a

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100 mL reservoir kept in an ice bath through 2.5 mm i.d. Tygon tubing, wrapped

around the sample loop casing with a variable-speed pump drive (Model 75225,

Cole Parmer).

The analytical column was inserted in a 450 \xm i.d. stainless steel tube

around which heating tape was wrapped. A layer of aluminum foil, a 1-inch thick

layer of glass wool, and another layer of aluminum foil, each tightly wrapped,

completed the column heafing enclosure CH. The temperature was monitored

by a platinum RTD in contact with the steel tube and was controlled by a PID

temperature controller (Micromega CN770, Omega Engineering, Stamford, CT).

An absorbance detector (Linear UVIS 200, Spectra-Physics /

Thermoseparation systems), designed for on-column detecfion with capillaries,

was used for detection. A detection wavelength of 195 nm was used in all work.

In order to keep the superhot liquid eluent from boiling while passing through the

detector, 10 i m i.d. capillaries of variable lengths were attached to the exit of the

column to maintain a back pressure of 1000 ~ 3000 psi.

For thermal gradient separations using an FID detector, the column was

placed in a gas chromatography oven (Model 4300SX, Varian Inc., controlled by

Varian Star 4.5 software) with the column outlet being directly connected to the

FID inlet (held at 275 °C). Others have previously looked into opfimizing the

hydrogen and air flows to the FID for maximizing the signal to noise rafio. We

made only crude adjustments to obtain reasonable signals, no detailed sensifivity

optimization was carried out since improving detecfion sensitivity was not an

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objective of this work. No backpressure regulator was used after the column and

no modifications were made to the FID.

Water used in the experiments was disfilled and then further purified in a

Barnstead Nanopure system. Fused silica capillaries (Polymicro Technologies,

Phoenix, AZ), hydrogen (ultrapure grade, Airgas, Lubbock, TX), benzene

derivatives (reagent grade, Aldrich) were obtained as indicated.

Fused silica capillary columns (360 nm o.d. and 180 |am i.d., Polymicro

Technologies, Phoenix, AZ) were packed in-house with frits made after Kennedy

and Jorgenson as previously described.^^ For use with the UV detector, the frit

was placed -10 cm from the exit end of the capillary. With the FID, the frit was

placed at the very end. The bed length was 13 cm for all reported results. Two

different 3 |Lim diameter zirconia based packing materials were used: (a) Zr02

modified with polybutadiene, and (b) Zr02 modified with elemental carbon

(ZirChrom-PBD and ZirChrom-Carb, ZirChrom Separafions, Anoka, MN). Only

for prolonged high temperature studies with the FID, stainless steel capillaries

(0.014 inch o.d. 0.007 in. i.d. tubing, x 20 cm. Small Parts Inc., Miami Lakes, FL)

were packed with 3 i m dia. ZirChrom-Carb. A frit was made by packing glass

wool (~0.25mm thick bed) in a 0.016 inch i.d., 0.020 inch o.d. stainless steel tube

which served as a butt-joint connector between the column and an exit tube with

the same dimensions as the column.

To pack columns, a 40% w/v slurry of the zirconia based particles in a

10% aqueous Triton X-100 solution was agitated and a portion was transferred to

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the slurry reservoir. A Shandon HPLC packing pump (Shandon Southern

Instruments Inc., Model 628 x51, Sewickley, PA) was used with water as the

packing liquid. During the packing process, the slurry reservoir was constantly

agitated and the pressure was increased from 0 to 7000 psi in 30 s, with

complete column packing taking less than 3 min. After the desired column length

was achieved, the packed column was then placed in an ultrasonic bath and

sonicated for 3 h with the column under 7000 psi. The pressure was then

maintained at 7000 psi for 24 h. We did not use frits at the head of the column.

Results and Discussion

Silica Presaturator

The solubility of silica is greatly increased in superhot water. Water was

continuously pumped through the column at a fiow rate of 8.5 i^L/min and the

temperature was alternately maintained at 250 °C and 25 °C for 12 h periods.

Without the silica presaturator, the column burst due to dissolufion of the capillary

wall In -3 days. With the silica presaturator, the column maintained its structural

integrity and no voids were seen in 30 days of continuous operation. At

temperatures closer to supercritical conditions, e.g., at 370 °C, a fused silica

column fails catastrophically in 1 h, generally developing picturesque helical

cracking patterns that separate in sawtooth patterned hemicylindrical pieces

(Figure 4.2). The presence of the silica presaturator increased the operafional

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period under these condifions to 10 h; of course, this is still not long enough to be

practical and the use of some other column material is warranted.

Thermally stable stationary phases

The selection of a stationary phase compatible with superhot water is

obviously an issue. If dissolufion of silica from the very limited surface area of a

fused silica column is of concern at temperatures above 250°C, the dissolution of

silica from the core of any silica based stationary phase will obviously be a much

greater problem, especially since it is impossible to provide quantitative surface

coverage of whatever type of funcfionality is put on. Polymeric phases,

especially poly(styrenediyinylbenzene) (PSDVB), do not have solubility problems

but these phases generally exhibit too great a retenfion for nonpolar aromatic

analytes for use with a water eluent. Further, at temperatures above 250°C, the

confinually increasing absorbance of the column effluent suggests that the

packing is beginning to depolymerize. Any chemical modification that is made to

the surface functional group must also be compatible with both the temperature

and an aqueous environment. As a core material, zirconia is excellent due to its

exceptional thermal stability. Its aqueous solubility, even at elevated

temperatures, is negligible. Both elemental carbon and polybutadiene modified

zirconia based stationary phases are commercially available and both functional

groups have good thermal stability and are compafible with aqueous eluents.

The elemental carbon phase is fully stable at the maximum temperature used in

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this work; it is likely that other commercially available carbon based phases will

also be stable.

Properties of Superhot Water

An oft-cited paper by Hawthorne et al. ^ contains an informative figure on

the variation of dielectric constant of water as a function of temperature and how

these values compare with common eluent compositions used in reversed phase

LC. Similar informafion has been subsequently published by others. ^ In Figure

4.3, we show both the viscosity and the dielectric constant of water over a more

extended rage of temperature. Both viscosity and the dielectric constant

decrease with increasing temperature, approximately in an exponential

fashion.^''•^^ For liquid water, the viscosity is only weakly pressure dependent;

we have chosen the viscosity data at a pressure of 7200 psi, typical of our

column operations in this study. Over the entire range of temperature of interest,

the relationships below satisfactorily express the dielectric constant £-and the

viscosity rj of water:

f = 85.31-0.2901 f+2.572x10"^/^, r2=0.9965 (4.1)

; ,ater(@ 7200 psi) = (f°^''^^'Y 18906, r = 0.9947 (4.2)

where t is the temperature in degrees Celsius. The majority of the change in the

viscosity occurs between room temperature and 200 °C. The viscosity of water

changes by 400% within this range,^^ permitting a four fimes longer column or a

4-fold greater flow rate at the higher temperature. The Stokes-Einstein

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relationship^" invokes that the diffusion coefficient varies in proportion to the ratio

of the absolute temperature to the viscosity. Further gains in chromatographic

performance may therefore be attainable at high flow rates at temperatures

beyond 200 °C, albeit no further significant gains are likely to be realized in terms

of decreased column pressure beyond this temperature.

The dielectric constant of water is pressure-dependent; this is more

pronounced at higher temperatures. Figure 4.4 shows the pressure dependence

of the dielectric constant at 200, 300, 400 and 550 °C. ®' ^ Even when an exit

backpressure is applied to keep the effluent in the liquid state with UV absorption

detectors, the pressure at the column exit is far smaller than the column head

pressure. As such, there is a confinuous and significant pressure gradient

across the column. If the column is at the same temperature along its length,

then the dielectric constant/polarity also varies confinuously along the length of

the column. A solvent polarity gradient along the column has the same effect as

decreasing the stationary phase capacity from the start to the end. The solvent

is more polar at the head of the column than towards the end; the difference can

be especially pronounced at low pressures, just above the critical pressure.

However, for high-speed separations driven by an increased flow rate, most of

the column will not experience such a low pressure.

Most previous studies using superhot liquid water have been limited to

separating polar organic analytes. For superhot liquid water to compete with

organic modifiers in RPLC, the system has to be able to elute polar as well as

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non-polar analytes. A series of benzene derivatives were separated using both

the elemental carbon and polybutadiene modified 3 ^m zirconia phases. The

injected sample contained a mixture of 7 analytes, 0.1% (v/v) phenol, and 0.5%

(v/v) benzene, nitrobenzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, n-propylbenzene, and

n-butylbenzene. A complete mixture was injected in every run; however, all the

analytes did not elute from the column at lower temperatures. Figure 4.5 shows

the nature of these separations. At 370 °C, n-butylbenzene elutes in under 7 min

(not shown in the figure). The temperature stability of ZirChrom-PBD is lower

and 300 °C is the maximum practical operating temperature. At all temperatures,

the PBD-phase was observed to be more retentive for the alkylbenzene analytes

than the carbon phase. This behavior is opposite to that observed for ambient

temperature hydroorganic eluent separations on these phases.^ ' ^

The retention times over the studied range of temperatures vary over such

a large range that the chromatograms are plotted with a logarithmic time axis for

best viewing. Because the sample solvent (acetonitrile) elutes essentially in the

void volume, it does not fully attain the column temperature by the time it exits

the column. The response from the solvent is primarily due to refractive index

effects. As such, the solvent peak increases in magnitude as the operating

temperature increases. It is interesfing to note that nitrobenzene and toluene

changes retenfion orders with temperature on the carbon phase but not on the

PBD-phase. In a tradifional hydroorganic eluent system, similar behavior has

been observed by others as the polarity of the eluent is increased.^^ The

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opfimum temperature for the carbon phase for this particular separafion appears

to be ~170 °C while the separation confinues to improve with increasing

temperature on the PBD phase.

Figure 4.6 shows high speed separations on (a) the ZirChrom-Carb phase

at 300 °C and a flow rate of 20 ^L/min (equivalent to 13 mL/min on a 4.6 mm

column) and (b) the ZirChrom-PBD column at 240 °C at a flow rate of 27 ^L/min

(equivalent to 17.5 mL/min on a 4.6 mm column). To our knowledge, these

separafions are faster than any other isothermal isocrafic liquid chromatographic

separation performed on comparable compounds, not just with water as eluent.

Faster separafions are indeed possible with hydroorganic eluent gradients; this

also helps maintain chromatographic efficiency for late eluting peaks. The

equivalent to this in the present system is a thermal gradient, and is discussed in

a later section.

Does Separafion Mechanism Change with Temperature? Thermodynamics of Solute Transfer.

A sensitive probe for any changes in the separation mechanism as a

function of temperature is a Van't Hoff plot (log k' vs. 1/T). A recfilinear plot

indicates that the same separation mechanism prevails across the entire

temperature range of interest. Recently, Yang et al. reported that Van't Hoff plots

for the separation of substituted benzene derivatives on a Nucleosil C-18 phase

using a superhot water eluent were non-linear, thus suggesfing a change in

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retenfion mechanism.^^ Figure 4.7 illustrates that recfilinear Van't Hoff plots are

obtained for all solutes on both the ZirChrom phases over an even greater range

of temperature than studied by Yang et al. The difference in the obsen/ations is

therefore phase related. The behavior observed by Yang et al. could indeed be

due to a shift from an adsorpfion to a partition-like process if the C-18 chains

unfold as the dielectric constant of the water decreases with increasing

temperature. Unlike the C-18 packing used by Yang et al., the polybutadiene

modifier always lies on the surface due to extensive cross linking and thus can

not collapse in an aqueous environment or open up in a non-polar environment.

The nature of the carbon phase also likely remains unaltered throughout the

temperature range studied.

The standard enthalpy and entropy of the solute transfer can be calculated

from the slope and the intercept of the plots in Figure 4.7, respectively.^^ The

highly parallel nature of the alkyl benzene behavior in the plots is readily

observed. Detailed data are presented in Table 4.1. The entropy terms should

be considered merely relafive because we can only estimate the gross (as

opposed to the active) volume of the stationary phase. Nevertheless, the data

readily show that while the retention of the alkylbenzenes, especially with

increasing carbon number, is promoted due to entropic reasons, the retenfion of

the more polar phenol and especially nitrobenzene is largely governed by

enthalpy.

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Thermal Gradients

One clear advantage of the capillary scale in high temperature liquid

chromatography is its ability to facilitate rapid and uniform heating throughout the

column. Figure 4.8 shows a thermal gradient separafion with flame ionizafion

detection. The average retention times (n = 4) and the % RSD values for the

individual analytes in a 6-component mixture were as follows: phenol (1.20 min,

0.80%), benzene (1.35 min, 0.96%), nitrobenzene (1.65 min, 0.86%), toluene

(2.02 min, 1.10%), ethylbenzene (2.44 min, 1.55%), and propylbenzene (3.16

min, 1.56%). The average RSD of retenfion fimes under gradient conditions was

thus 1.20%. It should be noted that this performance is obtained with a

homemade pumping system that costs under $1500 to fabricate.

When Does Liquid Water Turn into Gas?

With a detection technique like flame ionizafion or mass spectrometry, that

actually handles the sample in the gas phase, the issue of using a backpressure

capillary after the detector is moot. A small diameter exit restrictor between the

column and the detector can be used to keep the mobile phase in the liquid state

in the column but coupling such a restrictor between the column and the detector

generates unavoidable and undesirable post column band broadening. If the

column terminus is directly coupled to the detector, some of the end portion of

the column is effectively the restrictor and the mobile phase will go from liquid to

the gas phase at some point in the column. In terms of experimental

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performance and simplicity, we found that the best results are indeed obtained

with the column directly coupled to the detector.

The interesfing quesfion that then arises is at what point does the eluent

boil in the column and how does it affect the resulfing separation? Is it merely all

a continuum between liquid chromatography with superheated water and gas

chromatography with hot steam?^'* In chemical engineering pracfice, the

backpressure created by fluid flow through a packed bed is traditionally

computed by the Ergun equafion:^"*

AP/AL = (1-(D)p(/[(150Ti(1-<D))/(pwdp) + 1.75]/{0%) (4.3)

Where AP is the pressure drop across a portion of a packed column of

length AL, p, u, and r| are respectively the density, nominal flow velocity and the

viscosity of the fluid, dp is the particle diameter and O is the void fraction in the

column. The fluid velocity u is most conveniently calculated from the known

mass flow rate G pumped by the pump, the density of the fluid at the location of

the column under considerafion (p) and the inner radius of the column r.

u = G/{nf^p) (4.4)

A program written to calculate the Ergun equation values was obtained on

the web. ^ We used the Ergun equation in an iterative fashion as follows.

Consider that a column is being operated at fC. The vapor pressure of water at

this temperature is known to be Pb atm. At the point in the column the pressure

drops below this value, liquid water is converted into the vapor phase. A

constant given temperature is assumed in any calculation. Starting then at fC

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and Pb atm we use an iterative BASIC routine that utilizes a software

addressable version of the steam tables^^ to calculate p and r|. The Ergun

equation is then used to calculate the pressure drop AP over a small length AL (1

[am was used in our calculations). The calculafion is then repeated for a new

pressure P-AP This procedure is repeated until the new pressure becomes

equal to the ambient pressure. If the total number of iterations to reach this point

is n, the total length of the column from the end in which the liquid water has

turned into vapor is then nAL. At a flow rate of 8.6 mg/min of water (same

condifions as in Figure 4.8), we calculate for our columns (void fracfion in these

columns is typically 0.56) that the transifion to vapor phase begins respectively 0,

0.044, 0.35, 2.38, 8.15, 28.3 and 48.0 cm at temperatures of 100, 150, 200, 250,

300, 350, and 370 °C. The relationship of the length with temperature is

approximately exponential (r = 0.9858). If the packing contains small pores, the

resulting capillary effect will reduce vapor pressure. The length of the column

filled with gaseous eluent as computed above will be a small overestimation.

Also, these computations are meaningful only if a given column is sufficiently

long and the head pressure on the column is greater than P/,. Othenwise, if a 20

cm column at 370 C is used with a H2O mass flow rate of 8.6 mg/min, the enfire

column will contain water in the gaseous state. In actual experiments with a 20

cm stainless steel capillary column and connected directly to the FID, separafion

of injected analytes was observed up to temperatures of 300 °C; however, as the

temperature was raised to 350 °C, only a single undifferentiated response was

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observed. These results, therefore, suggest that in this particular packed

capillary mode, without a backpressure on the column, operafions should be

limited to temperatures at which the majority of the column contains the eluent in

the liquid phase. It is interesfing to note that these calculafions also suggest that

as long as mixtures of gases and liquids are not formed within the detector cell

causing consequent problems, even with an optical detector it is not essential to

have a backpressure capillary, absorbance can be measured just as well in the

gas phase. However, due to a greater refractive index mismatch; light

throughput through the cell will be poorer.

In summary, we have described an affordable, environmentally friendly

capillary scale reverse phase liquid chromatography system using superheated

water eluent that can operate in isothermal and temperature gradient modes and

is capable of separafing both polar and non-polar compounds. There is, of

course, no barrier to using a solvent gradient at the same fime if a binary

pumping system is used.

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Literature Cited

1. Hawthorne, S.B.; Yang, Y.; Miller, D. J. Anal Chem., 1994, 66, 2912.

2. Yang, Y.; Bowadt, S.; Hawthorne, S. B.; Miller, D.J., Anal Chem., 1995, 67,

4571.

3. Arkelof, G. C; Oshry, H. I.; J. Am. Chem. Soc, 1950, 72, 3844.

4. Onobu, M.; Suzuki, A., Journal of the Surface Finishing Society of Japan. 2000,51, 11.

5. Foster, M. D.; Synovec, R. E.; Anal Chem, 1996, 68, 2838.

6. Miller D.J.; Hawthorne, S.B., Anal Chem. 1997, 69, 623.

7. Smith, R. M.; Burgess, R. J., J. Chromatogr., A 1997, 785, 49.

8. Yang, Y.; Belghazi, M.; Lagadec, A.; Hawthorne, S.B.; Miller, D.J., J. Chromatogr, A 1998, 810, 149.

9. Smith, R. M.; Chienthavorn, O., Chromatographia 1999, 50, 485-489.

10. Ingelse, B. A.; Janssen, H. G.; Cramers, C. A. J. High Resolut. Chromatogr. 1998, 21, 613.

11. Smith, R.S.; Chienthovorn, O.; Wilson, I.D.; Wright, B.; Taylor, S.D., Anal Chem, 1999,71,4493.

12. Smith, R. M.; Burgess, R. J.; Chienthavorn, O; Bone, J. R. LC GC Mag. 1999, 17, 938.

13. Poppe, H.; Kraak, J. C; Vandenberg H. H. M., Chromatographia , 1981 14, 515.

14. Nonaka, A. Anal. Chem. 1972, 44, 271-276; Rudenko, B. A.; Baydarovtseva, A.; Kuzovkin, V. A.; Kucherov, V. F. J. Chromatogr. 1975, 104, 271-275.

15. Hawthorne, S. B.; Yang, Y.; Miller, D. J. Anal. Chem. 1994, 66, 2912.

16. Yang, Y; Jones, A. D.; Eaton, C. D., Anal Chem., 1999, 71, 3808.

78

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17. Heger, K.; Uematsu, M.; Franck, E. U., BerBunseges. Phys. Chem. 1980, 84, 758.

18. Uematsu, M.; Franck, E. U., J. Phys. Chem. Ref Data. 1980, 9, 1291.

19. Haar, L.; Gallagher, J. S.; Kell, G. S., National Bureau of Standards/National Research Council Steam Tables; Hemisphere Publishing corp.; Bristol, P. 1984.

20. F. Daniels, R. A. Alberty, Physical Chemistry, Wiley, New York, 1955. pp503-506.

21. Weber, T. P.; Jackson, P. T.; Carr, P.W., Anal Chem, 1995, 67, 3042.

22. Li., J.; Carr, P. W. Anal. Chem. 1996, 68, 2857

23. Akapo, S. O.; Simpson, C. F. Chromatographia, 1997, 44, 135.

24. Ergun, S. Chemical Engineering Progress, 1952, 48, 89.

25. http://www.processassociates.com/process/fluid/rx 1 .htm

26. www.Taftan.com

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Table 4.1. Thermodynamic Properties for Solute Transfer

ZirChrom-Carb ZirChrom-PBD

Analyte Enthalpy Entropy Enthalpy Entropy (kJ/mol) J/(mol°K) (kJ/mol) J/(mol °K)

Benzene -8.56 -12.29 -8.00396 -7.36

Toluene

Ethylbenzene

Propylbenzene

Phenol

Nitrobenzene

-9.49

-9.10

-9.02

-12.48

-16.89

-4.41

3.12

12.74

-25.69

-23.26

-8.19004

-7.93

NM

-8.72

-7.55

-5.02

13.01

NM

-21.41

5.31

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Pump Computer

Figure 4.1 Hot water chromatography system, schematically shown. CV: Check

valve; PG: pressure sensor and gauge; SSC: silica saturation column; CH: column heater; BPC: back pressure column.

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Figure 4.2 60 times magnification of capillary column after structural failure.

82

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100.00

80.00

•2 60.00 c o

O o

o -^ 40.00 Q

20.00

0.00

o 0

n

A

Dielectric constant, water

Dielectric constant, acetone

Dielectric constant, acetonitrile

Dielectric constant, 50:50 ACN:H20

Viscosity of water at 7200 psi

viscosity, acetonitrile

viscosity, 50:50 ACN:H20

1000

800

600

400

200

0.00 200.00 400.00 Temperature, degrees C

600.00

V)

a o o CM

V)

-a o o <n "m o CO a. o o

to o o CO

Figure 4.3 Dielectric constant and viscosity of water at 7200 psi along with the viscosity

and dielectric constant of both pure ACN and a 50% ACN.

83

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Pressure, psi

Pressure, MPa

Figure 4.4 Dielectric constant of water as a function of pressure.

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i ZirChrom-Carb s,i \ 2 A , 370C ZirChrom-PBD

Time, min ^o""

I M I r M r

100 Time, min 1000

Figure 4. 4.5 Separafions on (left) ZirChrom-Carb and (right) ZirChrom-PBD columns;

detecfion at 195 nm, flow rate of 8.6 ^iL/min. s: solvent (acetonitrile), 1: phenol, 2: benzene, 3: toluene, 4: nitrobenzene, 5: ethylbenzene, and 6:

n-propylbenzene. All subsequent flgures has the same numerical identification for analytes. 5

85

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E c in

8 c CO

o IB

0.00

E c

UO C35

8 c CD

JQ

o (0

<

'1 ZirChrom-Carb, 300 °C, 20 juL/min 10150 psi

120.00 40.00 80.00 Time, s

ZirChrom-PBD, 240 °C, 27 ^L/min 10750 psi

40 80 Time, s

120

Figure 4.6 High speed separations (a) ZirChrom-Carb and (b) ZirChrom-PBD

columns at 300 °C and 240 °C, respectively.

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4.00 —

0.00 —

# Phenol • Benzene X Toluene

VNitrobenzene O Ethylbenzene

O Propylbenzene

4.00 —I

2.00 —

0.00 —

-2.00

0.0016

ZirChrom-Carb

0.0012 0.0016 0.0020 0.0024 0.0028 0.0032 Reciprocal Absolute Temperature

ZirChrom-PBD

0.0020 0.0024 Reciprocal Absolute Temperature

0.0028

Figure 4.7 Van't Hoff plots for the retenfion of benzene derivatives.

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5,00

4,00

p 3 , 0 0 -

S . 2.00 </> a>

1,00

0,00 - -

0.00

s(ACN) A

1,00 2.00 Time, min

Figure 4.8 Thermal gradient performed in GC oven using a FID detector. 180 |xm

i.d. 13 cm silica capillary with ZirChrom-Carb packing, flow rate 8.6 j^L/min. Temperature gradient started at 100 °C and was ramped to

250 °C @ 50 °C/min.

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CHAPTER V

FUTURE APPLICATIONS AND POTENTIAL IMPROVEMENTS

Details of a capillary scale liquid chromatography system have been

described in the preceding chapters. The system was shown to provide superior

performance over conventional reverse phase systems by utilizing the capillary

scale, an inexpensive, easy to construct pumping system with much higher

pressure rafing than available commercially, and high operafing temperatures.

These factors allowed the new system to perform separations in a fraction of the

time required by convenfional scale instruments while consuming a very small

quantities of sample and eluent. The lower solvent and sample consumpfion

along with reduced analysis time alone can pay for such a system in a short

period.

Portable RPLC System

Capillary scale HPLC systems are inherently capable of being portable.

From a practical standpoint, a portable instrument needs to be light weight, small,

have low power requirements, and have performance close to or comparable to

their bench top counterparts. The advantage of a portable instrument is the

ability to analyze a sample immediately. This gives one, in environmental

studies, the flexibility and the feedback on where to pick the sample site while in

the field running the analysis. Capillary scale HPLC instruments require limited

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quantities of eluent, have low power requirements, the ancillary components are

or can be made small and compact, and the overall performance can come close

to that of the larger conventional systems. The one component that is not readily

portable is the UVA/IS absorbance detector. Recent research in this laboratory

into inexpensive high performance optical absorbance detectors for capillary

systems suggest that compact capillary scale optical detectors, at least in a

dedicated wavelength format can be built easily.^ The use of compact

electronics, low-power, high-output light emitting diodes (LEDs), and photo

detectors will allow optical detectors to be built which are small enough in terms

of physical size and weight as well as power consumption to be portable. The

high pressure RPLC system described in Chapter II has the capability of being

made portable. The components used in the system are similar to a portable IC

system, which was developed in this laboratory.^ The development of such a

portable capillary scale reverse phase LC system would reduce the required

analysis fime and increase the flexibility while running the analysis.

Super-Hot Water LC-MS System

Recently, there has been a lot of research into the hyphenated systems

using LC, specifically LC-MS systems.^'^ Capillary LC systems have also been

used due to the small flow rate produced by these systems.^'^ Systems using

super-heated water as an eluent have also been used LC-MS systems which

take advantage of the fact that there are no organic modiflers in the eluent to

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interfere with the organic analytes.^ However, there has been no published

research that combines the low flow rate of the capillary scale with the

advantages of using super-heated water as an eluent in a LC-MS system. The

system described in Chapter IV can easily be adapted to a commercial MS. The

capillary scale will enable direct coupling and the high operafing temperature and

low backpressure at the tail of the column will allow the effluent to go into the gas

phase before entering the MS system. This system would combine the

advantages of a capillary LC system along with the low interference of a pure

water eluent to produce a very sensitive and powerful LC-MS system for drug

development analysis as well as many other applicafions.

Supercritical Water Chromatography

The system described in Chapter IV proved that chromatography can be

done at extremely high temperatures. However, this author feels that the upper

temperature limit has not been achieved. A system which uses a column that is

made from a material, which is insoluble and unreacfive to supercrifical water

would allow studies to be made at higher temperatures with greater stability.

However, the study would also have to incorporate a feasibility study looking at

what effect these super high temperatures have on real world analytes.

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Liquid Ionization Detector

An interesting and novel detection method developed in this laboratory® is

an oxidative ionization detection system. The system, designed to be coupled to

a hot water LC system, uses high temperature, oxygen saturated water, and UV

light to fully oxidize the organic analytes. Ozone is produced as an intermediate

with low wavelength UV and most organic analytes are at least partially oxidized

to produce ionizable products. Many are fully oxidized to CO2.

Organic Analyte + O^^^^^ """•"" ) H,0 + CO^

CO^^^^^+H^O >2H^ +C0-'

Ionized products can be detected by a simple conductivity detector. The initial

research done has proved the concept showing a conductivity signal even from

an analyte such as benzene; however, it has not been adapted to the LC system

and much work is needed to get a fully operating system with acceptable

detecfion limits. However, once operational such a system has the potential to

be a sensitive universal detector for organic analytes with a hot water eluent.

Another potential configuration for this setup is to allow the CO2 saturated water

to go into the gas phase then to use a simple IR absorbance measurement of

CO2 in the gas stream.

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Experimental Verification the Boiling Point in the Column

In Chapter IV, a theoretical evaluation of the point at which the water in

the super-heated water system will boil if there is no backpressure on the column

was presented. This was, however, not explored experimentally. This is an

interesting and important point about hot water chromatography that needs to be

explored. Experimentally this boiling point can be verified by using an open tube

capillary of sufficiently small dimensions. A setup using a 10 )Lim open capillary is

proposed. It would be put into a heating enclosure and operated at temperatures

that will boil the water at some point in the capillary. The optical properties of

liquid water and high-pressure steam should be different enough to allow a

simple absorbance or refractive index measurement to determine which is

present. Moving the measurement device to different points on the column, or

changing the temperature and pressure until a change is detected at a single

point should experimentally verify the theoretical calculation made in Chapter IV.

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Literature Cited

1. C.B. Boring, P.K. Dasgupta, Anal. Chima. Acta, 342 (1997) 123

2. C.B. Boring, P.K. Dasgupta, A.J. Sjogren, J. Chromatogr. A., 804 (1998) 45

3. G.S. Rule, A.V. Mordehai, J. Henion, Anal Chem 66 (1994) 230

4. K. Fujii, Y. Ikai, H. Oka, M. Suzuki, K. Harada, Anal. Chem 69 (1997) 5146

5. T. Trones, A. Tangen, W. Lund, T. Greibrokk, J. Chromatogr. A. 835 (1999) 105

6. A. Cappiello, F. Bruner, Anal. Chem. 65 (1993) 1281

7. R.M. Smith, O. Chienthavron, I.D. Wilson, B. Wright, S.D. Taylor, Anal. Chem 71 (1999)4493

8. Sakai, H.; Dasgupta, P.K.; Personal Communication, 1998

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CHAPTER VI

CONCLUSION

The research work presented in this dissertation developed a capillary

based reverse phase system capable of separating non-polar based analytes in

substantially less time than what is required from current commercial based

instruments. This time savings provides a substantial cost savings per run in

addition to the cost saved in the reduction of expensive organic modifiers.

Throughout this work benzene based homologs were used as example analytes

because of their availability, cost, and non-polar characteristics. Benzene and its

homologs can be separated more efficiently by gas chromatography, and thus

GC is the preferred method of separation. The purpose of this research was not

to develop a new method for separating benzene derivatives but to use the

benzene derivatives as an example of what could be achieved.

The high pressure gradient pumping system, discussed in Chapter II

surpassed the capillary scale commercial pumping systems available at the fime

for a fracfion of the cost. The merits of the pumping system were comparable to

the commercial pumps with the exception of the pressure limit which was

improved by a factor of 2. This allowed separations to be performed in half the

time or allowed longer columns or columns packed with smaller particles to be

used.

The high temperature reverse phase system described in Chapter III used

the high operating pressures along with high temperatures to perform high speed

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efficient separations. The elevated temperatures, up to 200 °C, lowered the

viscosity of the eluent along with increasing the diffusion rate. The study

discussed utilized the properties to reduce greatly the required analysis time,

thus increasing the number of plates achieved per minute. The efficient

separation of 8 benzene derivatives was achieved in less than 2 minutes. This

research focussed primarily on minimizing the separation time or maximizing the

number of theoretical plates per minute; however, the same system can be

configured to maximize total efficiency or the number of theoretical plates per

meter. By using longer columns packed with smaller particles, more efficient

separations could have been achieved at the expense of analysis time.

The setup described in Chapter IV is the first report of a capillary based

reverse phase chromatography system that uses super-hot water as an eluent.

The system was able to perform high speed separations that surpassed the

performance of the currently reported conventional scale systems using super-

hot water. By using the excellent thermal conductivity of the capillary scale, fast

thermal gradients were possible, allowing complete, efficient, and fast

separations to be performed. The system also demonstrated the ease of

coupling the capillary scale to non-traditional LC detection methods such as the

flame ionization detector used in gas chromatography.

The instrument described herein can provide substantial cost savings to

an analytical laboratories. The cost of the instrument on the commercial market

could easily be made competitive with the current commercial capillary scale and

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convenfional scale instruments. The savings in eluent consumption compared to

the conventional scale instruments and reduction in analysis fime compared to

the capillary systems that operate at ambient conditions would provide significant

cost savings.

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APPENDIX A

RETENTION MECHANISM THEORY

Even though reverse phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) is the most

utilized separation method, it has, perhaps, the least understood retention

mechanism.^ The two widely accepted theories which explain the separation

mechanism present in RPLC are the solvophobic theory developed by Horvath

and co-workers, •^•"* and the partifioning model.^' °' ''• ® In the solvophobic theory

the stationary phase is thought to behave like a solid. The solute interacts with

the surface of the stationary phase and the retention mechanism is only

dependent on the interactions between the solute and the mobile phase. When

the solute is adsorbed onto the surface of the stationary phase, the surface area

of the hydrophobic analyte exposed to the hydrophilic mobile phase is reduced.^

In the partition model, the stationary phase plays a more active role in the

retention process. The solute is thought of as being able to fully penetrate the

stationary phase, rather being limited to surface adsorption. Therefore the

stationary phase is considered more "liquid-like" than in the solvophobic theory.

Although the exact retention is still a matter of debate, there is a general

agreement that as the chain length of the bonded material becomes longer, the

retention mechanism is better describe as partition like. As the chain becomes

shorter, the retention mechanism becomes more similar to the adsorption

mechanism.

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Literature Cited

1. P.W. Carr, J. Li, A.J. Dallas, D.I. Eikens, and LC. Tan, J. Chromatogr, 656,

(1993), 113.

2. Cs. Horvath, and W. Melander, J. Chromatogr Sci., 15, (1977), 393.

3. Cs. Horvath, W. Melander and I. Molnar, J. Chromatogr., 125, (1976), 129. 4. W. Melander and Cs. Horvath, in Cs. Horvath (editor). High Performance

Liquid Chromatography - Advances and Perspectives Vol 2, Academic Press, New York, 1980, pp201.

5. D.E. Martire, D.E. and R.E. Boehm, J. Phys. Chem., 87, (1983), 1045.

6. K.A. Dill, J. Phys. Chem., 91, (1987), 1980.

7. K.A. Dill, J. Naghizadeh, and J.A. Marqusee, Annu. Rev. Phys. Chem., 39,

(1988), 425.

8. J.G. Dorsey, and K.A. Dill, Chem. Rev., 89, (1989), 331.

9. A. Weston, and P.R. Brown, HPLC and CE: Principles and Practice, Academic Press, San Diego, 1997.

10. H. Colin and G. Guiochon, J. Chromatogr, 141, (1977), 289.

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APPENDIX B

HPLC COLUMN PERFORMANCE

The performance of a chromatographic column is based on two

parameters. The chromatographic selectivity reflected by the distance between

two peak maxima, and the peak band-broadening\ The concept of theorefical

plates was developed to describe band-broadening by analyzing the shape of the

chromatographic peaks. Column efficiency can be expressed as the theoretical

plate number (N) or the height equivalent to a theorefical plate (HETP). The

number of theoretical plates can be calculated by the following equation^:

N=5.54(tr/wi/2)^ (B.I)

where tr is the retention time of the peak and W1/2 is the full peak width at half

height (FWHH). The HETP is calculated b / ° :

H (HETP)=L/N (B.2)

where L is the length of the column and N is the number of theorefical plates.

Band dispersion in a well-packed column arises from several independent

kinetic processes. Van Deemter et. al. developed the original rate theory

describing the process of band-broadening^ which, was later modified by Knox"*' ^•

^•^. The Knox equation is as follows:

1/ R h = Av'^+ — + Cv. (B.3)

V

The terms containing the constants A, B, and C will be discussed later while h is

equal to the reduced plate height and v is the reduced velocity.

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Reduced Velocity v = ud„ ( L\( d

p

D^ - (B.4)

Reduced Plate Height h n

d. 5.54 J , yh J (B.5)

Where Dm is the diffusion coefficient, L is equal to the column length, to is the

unretained peak fime, dp is the packing particle diameter, tr is the retenfion fime

of peak and Wi/2 is equal to the full peak width at half height. The advantage of

using the reduced Knox equafion, versus the typical van Deemter equafion, is

that it enables column to column comparisons to be made more accurately by

taking into account the ratio of the column diameter to that of the packing

diameter, referred to as the Knox-Parcher rafio.

The A Term

The A term of the Knox equation accounts for the anisotropic flow that is

encountered in the column. Flow anisotropy arises from the different paths and

flow rates that the eluent experiences as it flows around the packing material.

Analytes traveling in the different flow paths will reach the end of the column at a

different fime, thus producing a broader peak. The A term affects the maximum

optimal efficiency that can be attained on the column.

The B Term

The B term is used to describe the axial molecular diffusion. The axial

molecular diffusion is dependent only on the effective diffusion coefficient of the

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solute while it is in the mobile phase. The B term affects the column efficiency at

flow rates lower than the optimal flow rate.

The C Term

The C term in the Knox equation accounts for the slow kinetics of the

mass transfer between the stationary phase and the mobile phase. The kinetics

of the slow mass transfer is dependent on the kinetics of the adsorpfion or

partition mechanism and on the diffusion rate through the stagnant pools of

eluent that surround the stationary phase. The C term affects the efficiency of

the column at flow rates greater than the opfimal flow rate.

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Literature Cited

1. G. Szepsi, "How To use Reverse Phase HPLC", VCH Publishers, Inc., New York, 1992.

2. G. Szepesi, "How To Use Reverse-Phase HPLC", VCH Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, 1992.

3. J.J. van Deemter, F.J. Zuiderweg, and A. Klinkenburg, Chem, Eng. Sci., 5,

(1956), 271.

4. J.H. Knox, H.P Scott, IJ. Chromatogr., 282, (1983), 297.

5. J.H. Knox, G.J. Kennedy, J. Chromatogr Sci., 10, (1972), 549.

6. E. Grushka, L.R. Snyder, J.H. Knox, J. Chromatogr Sci., 13, (1975), 25.

7. Knox, J. H. J. Chromatogr. Sci. 15, (1977), 352.

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APPENDIX C

COMPUTER CONTROL OF PUMPING SYSTEM

The program, written in Visual Basic™ 4.0, used to control the custom

gradient pumping system utilizes a six-step gradient where each step has an

individual module. Pump flow rate is controlled by varing the fime delay between

pump steps. Delays can be as short as 1 microsecond and as long as 500

microseconds producing a wide variety of flow rates. The module calculates the

time delay between steps by dividing the total flow rate desired between the two

pumps based on eluent composition desired. The length of time required for the

step is converted into a specific number of steps. The module then creates a

command string for that module with the appropriate number of steps and delays

and attaches it to the end of the previous module's command string. When the

pumps are told to start the entire command string is downloaded into the resident

memory of each pump hardware via an RS-232 serial communication port and

told to run. Once the gradient has started the pumps will work independently of

the computer and of each other.

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