November 13th 2024
The 54th International Symposium on High Performance Liquid Phase Separations and Related Techniques (HPLC 2025) will be held from Sunday through Thursday, June 15-19, 2025, in Bruges, Belgium.
Analysis of Combinatorial Natural Products by HPLC and CE
February 1st 2004In this article the authors report on a combinatorial natural product discovery methodology that uses a viral vector system to transfer secondary metabolite-related enzymes from C. roseus to tobacco cell cultures. Using high-resolution separation techniques, including HPLC, CE and MS, they describe the analysis of secondary metabolite patterns.
Simulated Moving Bed Chromatography for Preparative Solutions
July 1st 2000This month's "Column Watch" describes moving bed chromatography and how the concept is realized in the form of simulated moving bed chromatography. Also included is an inside look at instrumentation, method development, and applications for industrial purifications.
Turbulent-Flow LC for LC–MS and LC–MS–MS Bioanalysis
This month's "Directions in Discovery" gives a brief overview of turbulent- flow liquid chromatography, a technique for fast separations. Two examples demonstrate the use of the technology for high-throughput bioanalytical separations in drug discovery.
Coupling Chiral Stationary Phases as a Fast Screening Approach for HPLC Method Development
June 1st 2000Given the increasing number of chiral samples and the time constraints under which chromatographers work, choosing an appropriate chiral stationary phase for the resolution of enantiomers can be challenging. In this article, the authors describe a screening approach for chiral HPLC method development.
Starting Out Right, Part VI – The Scouting Gradient Alternative
May 1st 2000A scouting gradient is a separation run under a standardized set of conditions and can be used to determine the complexity of a sample and estimate the difficulty of the separation. John Dolan tells why he believes using a scouting gradient is the best way to begin method development.
Analytical Advantages of Highly Stable Stationary Phases for Reversed-Phase LC
May 1st 2000During the past five years, many manufacturers of HPLC columns have focused on improving stationary phase stability and reproducibility. In this study, the authors use a variety of test solutes to compare the efficiency, selectivity, and hydrophobic retention mechanisms of five commercially available HPLC columns based silica, alumina, zirconia, and polystyrene cross-linked with divinylbenzene as the support.
New Chromatography Columns and Accessories at the 2000 Pittsburgh Conference, Part II
April 2nd 2000Concluding a two-part series, Ron Majors looks at the trends in the introduction of columns and column-related products at Pittcon 2000. In this second part, he describes gas chromatography and supercritical fluid chromatography columns, CE capillaries, thin-layer chromatography products, sample preparation products, and accessories for chromatography and sample preparation.
Configuring HPLC Systems for LC–MS
April 1st 2000This month's "Directions in Discovery" looks at column and mobile-phase selection as well as system components and modification. Making the right choices among these parameters will help analysts get the most out of their liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry systems.
New Chromatography Columns and Accessories at the 2000 Pittsburgh Conference, Part 1
March 1st 2000This month's column begins our annual roundup of new column technologies shown at the Pittsburgh Conference. In part I, we'll look at HPLC columns and packings for reversed-, normal-, and bonded-phase; ion-exchange; ion; size-exclusion; and large- and preparative-scale chromatography as well as specialty columns.
Starting Out Right, Part IV–Additional Variables to Control Selectivity
March 1st 2000In part III of this column series, John Dolan demonstrated that systematic variation of the solvent strength can change selectivity and retention, and changing solvent type can amplify the effect. This month, he looks at three additional parameters (pH, temperature, and column type) for adjusting selectivity.
The Effects of Inner Surface Roughness of Microbore Column Blanks on Column Performance
The efficiencies of microbore-2 columns, which are prepared from blanks that have a wide variety of inner surface roughness, drop sharply when the size of individual surface roughness features approaches the particle size of the packing material. The results suggest that two categories of packed column structure relate to the surface features and yield high and low efficiency columns. This installment of "Column Watch" discusses this conclusion in terms of the stability of an agglomerated layer of packing particles on the blank wall when subjected to shear forces during column packing.