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Chromatography Techniques

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Introduction to Chromatography - Separation Science Sorcery

  • Principle: Separates mixtures via differential distribution between two phases.
    • Stationary Phase (SP): Fixed solid or liquid-coated solid.
    • Mobile Phase (MP): Moving liquid or gas carrying analytes.
  • Mechanisms: Adsorption, partition, ion exchange, size exclusion, affinity.
  • Key term: Retention Factor ($R_f$) in planar chromatography; $R_f = \frac{\text{solute distance}}{\text{solvent front distance}}$.

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⭐ The fundamental basis of chromatography is the differential partitioning of analytes between a stationary and a mobile phase, dictating separation.

Paper & TLC - Flatland Feats

  • Principle: Adsorption (TLC) or Partition (Paper Chromatography). Solutes separate by differential affinity between stationary and mobile phases.
  • Stationary Phase:
    • Paper Chromatography: Cellulose paper (water adsorbed acts as stationary liquid phase).
    • TLC: Thin layer of adsorbent (e.g., silica gel, alumina) on an inert plate.
  • Mobile Phase: Solvent or solvent mixture that moves up the stationary phase by capillary action.
  • $R_f$ Value (Retention Factor): $R_f = \frac{\text{distance travelled by solute}}{\text{distance travelled by solvent}}$
    • Characteristic for a compound under specific conditions; range 0-1.
  • Visualization: Staining (e.g., iodine vapor, ninhydrin for amino acids), UV light if compounds are fluorescent.
  • Applications: Separation and identification of amino acids, sugars, pigments, drugs; assessing sample purity.

Paper Chromatography setup, process, and Rf calculation

⭐ TLC generally offers faster separation, better resolution, and a wider choice of stationary phases compared to paper chromatography, making it more versatile for various biochemical analyses.

Column Chromatography - Packed Powerhouses

Separates solutes: differential partitioning between stationary (SP) & mobile phases (MP) in a column.

  • Principle: Varied SP interaction → differential migration.
  • Components: SP (solid/coated solid), MP (liquid eluent).
  • Key Types (Basis):
    • Adsorption: Solute adsorption to SP.
    • Partition: Solute partitioning (liquid-liquid).
    • Ion-Exchange (IEC): Charge (SP: ion-exchange resin).
      • Cation exchangers: bind cations.
      • Anion exchangers: bind anions.
    • Size Exclusion (SEC): Size (SP: porous beads). Larger elutes first (↓ $t_R$).
    • Affinity: Specific binding (e.g., Ab-Ag).

      ⭐ Affinity chromatography: highest specificity & purification.

  • Elution: Washing solutes.
    • Isocratic: Constant MP.
    • Gradient: Varied MP (e.g., ↑ salt).
  • Terms: Retention time ($t_R$), Void volume ($V_0$).

Column Chromatography Process Diagram

📌 Mnemonic (Types): "A PISA" - Adsorption, Partition, Ion-exchange, Size-exclusion, Affinity.

GC & HPLC - Speedy Separations

  • Gas Chromatography (GC): For volatile/semi-volatile compounds.
    • Mobile Phase (MP): Inert gas (e.g., He, N₂).
    • Stationary Phase (SP): High bp liquid on solid support or capillary wall.
    • Principle: Differential partitioning based on volatility & SP affinity.
    • Detection: FID (Flame Ionization Detector - common), MS (Mass Spectrometry - identification).
    • Key: Sample must be thermally stable & volatile; derivatization may be needed. Gas Chromatography instrument schematic
  • High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC): For non-volatile/thermally labile compounds.
    • MP: Liquid solvent(s). High pressure (~400 atm) applied for speed & resolution.
    • SP: Packed fine particles (e.g., silica, C18-bonded silica).
    • Principle: Differential adsorption/partitioning between MP & SP.
    • Modes: Normal Phase (polar SP, non-polar MP), Reverse Phase (non-polar SP, polar MP).
    • Detection: UV-Vis (common), RI, Fluorescence, MS.

⭐ Reverse-Phase HPLC (RP-HPLC) is highly versatile and the most widely used mode, ideal for separating a broad range of analytes from non-polar to moderately polar.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Chromatography separates via differential partitioning between stationary and mobile phases.
  • Size Exclusion Chromatography (SEC): Larger molecules elute first, separated by molecular size/volume.
  • Ion Exchange Chromatography (IEC): Separates based on net charge using cation/anion exchange resins.
  • Affinity Chromatography: Highly specific separation based on reversible ligand-biomolecule binding.
  • Reverse-Phase HPLC (RP-HPLC): Employs a non-polar stationary phase and polar mobile phase.
  • Gas Chromatography (GC): Separates volatile compounds using an inert gas mobile phase.
  • Thin Layer Chromatography (TLC): Used for qualitative analysis via Rf values.

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