JOURNAL ARTICLE

Metallomesogenic stationary phase for open‐tubular capillary electrochromatography

Jian‐Lian Chen

Year: 2006 Journal:   Electrophoresis Vol: 27 (4)Pages: 729-735   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Abstract A synthetic coppermesogenic polymer is prepared and then covalently bonded to the siloxane‐based deactivated column as the stationary phases of open‐tubular CEC with essentially high phase ratio. The EOF generated from the modified phase is surveyed through conventional aqueous buffers and hydroorganic mobile phases. Zeta potentials, which are computed from the EOF data and the ratio of dielectric constant to viscosity, are plotted as a function of pH, ionic molarity, and compositional range. These plots responsible for the electroosmotic characteristic of the bonded phases are found to be like those of bare fused‐silica or deactivated columns through decreasing or increasing the ACN content in the mobile phase, respectively. This two‐phase characteristic is basically derived from the polymeric configuration with carboxylato ligands attached onto the polysiloxane backbone. Phthalates and amino acids are suitable probes to examine the two phenomena, more‐polar and less‐polar mediums, respectively, and to judge whether the chromatographic retention is the major source of separation mechanism. With the mixing modes of Lewis acid–base interaction, dispersive force, and shape discrimination, the chromatographic partition adequately accomplishes the uneasily resolved separations by only CZE mode, although the electrophoretic migration is truly somewhat involved.

Keywords:
Capillary electrochromatography Chemistry Siloxane Phase (matter) Polymer Dielectric Aqueous solution Ionic bonding Polar Electrophoresis Electrochromatography Ionic strength Chromatography Partition coefficient Analytical Chemistry (journal) Capillary electrophoresis Materials science Organic chemistry Ion

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Citation History

Topics

Microfluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Innovative Microfluidic and Catalytic Techniques Innovation
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Analytical Chemistry and Chromatography
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Spectroscopy
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