Correlation of Analyte Retention in Organic and Inorganic Mobile Phases to aid Liquid Chromatography Method Development

HPLC, UHPLC

Correlation of Analyte Retention in Organic and Inorganic Mobile Phases to aid Liquid Chromatography Method Development

16 Jun, 2011

Published over 14 years ago. See the latest and most current information on HPLC, UHPLC.

Paul Ferguson and Ronan Huet
1 min read
Download

Many liquid chromatography methods are developed using organic mobile phase additives which allow compatibility with mass-spectrometric (MS) detection. However, these types of additives often give high UV absorbance which can lead to low level impurity quantitation issues.

Additionally, these additives often have little or no buffering capacity at the pH they are typically used, which in turn can lead to variability in analyte retention time. A rational approach for the selection of phosphate buffers from organic based mobile phase additives of the same pH (acidic or neutral) in liquid chromatography stability indicating method (SIM) development may provide a solution to this problem. Excellent correlation was observed for analyte retention (33 test analytes) in switching from an organic based mobile phase additive to an appropriate potassium phosphate buffer at low and mid pH. This approach provides a basis for developing SIM methods under mass-spectrometer friendly conditions and converting them directly to phosphate methods (or vice-versa) which typically provide higher UV sensitivity and retention robustness while maintaining the elution order and chromatographic resolution observed with the organic mobile phase additives.

Keywords: UHPLC, phosphate buffers, retention correlation, ion-pairing

Explore Our Other Sites

Labmate Online
Up to half of kidney disease cases remain undiagnosed, Lancet series warns
Explore more Arrow
Envirotech Online
Real-time gas detection integrated into robotic inspections for safer hazard assessment
Explore more Arrow
Pollution Solutions Online
Next-generation reverse osmosis membranes for more efficient and cost-effective seawater desalination
Explore more Arrow
Petro Online
SAF shortfall puts fuel testing and blending control under pressure
Explore more Arrow