Effect of in the mobile phase on the critical conditions of poly(ethylene glycol) in liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry coupling.

Anal Methods

Universités Aix-Marseille I, II et III - CNRS, UMR 6264: Laboratoire Chimie Provence, Spectrométries Appliquées à la Chimie Structurale, F-13397, Marseille, France.

Published: November 2009

The nature of salts introduced in the chromatographic mobile phase to promote on-line electrospray ionization was shown to be a key parameter in the optimization of LCCC-MS couplings, both using non-polar (Si-C18) and polar (Si-NH2) stationary phases. The critical conditions of poly(ethylene glycol), which reflect a compensation process between exclusion and interaction effects, were strongly modified when changing the size of the cation in the eluent. This phenomenon could be attributed to interactions between the cation and water molecules from the mobile phase, in the case of the non-polar stationary phase, giving rise to a salting out effect due to a lowered solvent quality of the eluent; or between the cation and amino-modified silanols of the polar stationary phase, inducing a decrease of the surface adsorptivity. Accordingly, increasing the size of the cation in the mobile phase caused the polymer molecules to be eluted according to the adsorption mode using non-polar adsorbent and according to the exclusion mode using polar stationary phase.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/b9ay00118bDOI Listing

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