Publications by authors named "Mimi J den Uijl"

In this work, a microfluidic photoreactor was embedded in a recycling liquid-chromatography system. Mixtures were separated on an analytical column and compounds of interest were subsequently introduced into the light-reactor cell. After degradation, the content of the light-reactor cell was reinjected onto the same column to separate the parent compound from its degradation products.

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Two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2DLC) offers great separation power for complex mixtures. The frequently encountered incompatibility of two orthogonal separation systems, however, makes its application complicated. Active-modulation strategies can reduce such incompatibility issues considerably.

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Photodegradation greatly affects everyday life. It poses challenges when food deteriorates or when objects of cultural heritage fade, but it can also create opportunities applied in advanced oxidation processes in water purification. Studying photodegradation, however, can be difficult because of the time needed for degradation, the inaccessibility of pure compounds, and the need to handle samples manually.

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The use of scanning gradients can significantly reduce method-development time in reversed-phase liquid chromatography. However, there is no consensus on how they can best be used. In the present work we set out to systematically investigate various factors and to formulate guidelines.

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Rapid optimization of gradient liquid chromatographic (LC) separations often utilizes analyte retention modelling to predict retention times as function of eluent composition. However, due to the dwell volume and technical imperfections, the actual gradient may deviate from the set gradient in a fashion unique to the employed instrument. This makes accurate retention modelling for gradient LC challenging, in particular when very fast separations are pursued.

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Recent applications of retention modelling in liquid chromatography (2015-2020) are comprehensively reviewed. The fundamentals of the field, which date back much longer, are summarized. Retention modeling is used in retention-mechanism studies, for determining physical parameters, such as lipophilicity, and for various more-practical purposes, including method development and optimization, method transfer, and stationary-phase characterization and comparison.

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Unbiased characterization of dyes and their degradation products in cultural-heritage objects requires an analytical method which provides universal separation power regardless of dye classes. Dyes are small molecules that vary widely in chemical structure and properties, which renders their characterization by a single method challenging. We have developed a comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography method hyphenated with mass spectrometry and UV-vis detection.

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