Trifluoroacetic acid performance of the Vanquish Flex Binary UHPLC system
Technical notes | 2017 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) is widely used as an ion-pairing reagent in reversed-phase UHPLC to improve peptide and protein separations by lowering mobile phase pH and altering analyte interactions with the stationary phase. However, TFA’s strong UV absorbance below 250 nm and retention on C18 columns generate baseline ripples under common shallow gradients, compromising detection limits and sensitivity for low-level impurities.
This technical note evaluates strategies to minimize TFA-induced baseline noise while preserving low gradient delay volumes (GDVs) required for high throughput analyses. Three pump-related factors are examined on the Vanquish Flex Binary UHPLC system compared to the UltiMate 3000 Binary RS system: mixer volume, stroke volume, and flow consistency under TFA gradients.
Gradient conditions involved a Thermo Scientific Accucore C18 column (2.6 µm, 2.1×100 mm) at 0.6 mL/min, 25 °C, with water/0.1 % TFA (A) and acetonitrile/0.085 % TFA (B), applying a 5–55 % B ramp over 30 min. Key experimental variations included:
Instrumentation used:
• Mixer volume: Increasing mixer volume from 200 µL to 400 µL reduced but did not eliminate TFA baseline ripples, at the cost of larger GDV and delayed elution.
• Stroke volume: Capillary-based flow splitting of solvent B reduced its volume period from 400 µL to 80 µL, enabling complete mixing in a 200 µL mixer and significant ripple attenuation.
• Flow consistency: Advanced pump control on the Vanquish Flex system compensated solvent thermal expansion/compression effects, halving baseline noise from 0.17 ± 0.01 mAU to 0.08 ± 0.01 mAU under identical 400 µL mixer conditions, without increased GDV.
The optimized Vanquish Flex Binary UHPLC delivers ultra-low TFA baseline noise and maintains low GDV, supporting high-throughput peptide and protein analyses with improved sensitivity. Flexible mixer options allow tuning of detection limits without sacrificing run times or requiring additional dampers.
Emerging developments may include further miniaturized pump architectures to reduce volume periods intrinsically, real-time flow diagnostics, and adaptive control algorithms for other challenging ion-pairing reagents. Integration with multidimensional LC workflows and coupling to high-resolution mass spectrometry could extend the benefits of low-noise TFA separations to advanced proteomics and bioanalysis.
The Vanquish Flex Binary UHPLC system, equipped with enhanced pump control, effectively minimizes TFA-related baseline disturbances while preserving low gradient delay volumes. This dual capability enables sensitive, high-throughput peptide and protein analyses without compromising chromatographic performance.
1. Thermo Scientific Technical Note 108: Reliable Solvent Mixing in UHPLC.
2. Winkler G. LCGC, 1987, 5(12), 1044–1045.
3. Thermo Scientific Poster Note 64807: UHPLC Optimization Study for Improved LC-MS Performance and Throughput.
4. Choikhet K., Glatz B., Rozing G. LC GC Europe, February 2003.
HPLC
IndustriesManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Significance of the topic
Trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) is widely used as an ion-pairing reagent in reversed-phase UHPLC to improve peptide and protein separations by lowering mobile phase pH and altering analyte interactions with the stationary phase. However, TFA’s strong UV absorbance below 250 nm and retention on C18 columns generate baseline ripples under common shallow gradients, compromising detection limits and sensitivity for low-level impurities.
Study objectives and overview
This technical note evaluates strategies to minimize TFA-induced baseline noise while preserving low gradient delay volumes (GDVs) required for high throughput analyses. Three pump-related factors are examined on the Vanquish Flex Binary UHPLC system compared to the UltiMate 3000 Binary RS system: mixer volume, stroke volume, and flow consistency under TFA gradients.
Methodology and instrumentation
Gradient conditions involved a Thermo Scientific Accucore C18 column (2.6 µm, 2.1×100 mm) at 0.6 mL/min, 25 °C, with water/0.1 % TFA (A) and acetonitrile/0.085 % TFA (B), applying a 5–55 % B ramp over 30 min. Key experimental variations included:
- Mixer volumes of 200 µL and 400 µL
- Simulation of reduced piston stroke volumes via capillary flow-splitting to mimic 16 µL versus 80 µL periods
- Enhanced pump control algorithms to stabilize flow and compensate thermal compression effects
Instrumentation used:
- Vanquish Flex Binary UHPLC system: System Base (VF-S01-A), Binary Pump F (VF-P10-A), Split Sampler FT (VF-A10-A), Column Compartment H (VH-C10-A), Diode Array Detector HL (VH-D10-A) with 10 mm LightPipe flow cell
- UltiMate 3000 Binary RS system: SRD-3600 solvent rack with degasser, HPG-3400RS pump, WPS-3000TRS autosampler, DAD-3000RS detector with 7 mm semi-micro flow cell
- Chromeleon CDS software v7.2 SR4
Main results and discussion
• Mixer volume: Increasing mixer volume from 200 µL to 400 µL reduced but did not eliminate TFA baseline ripples, at the cost of larger GDV and delayed elution.
• Stroke volume: Capillary-based flow splitting of solvent B reduced its volume period from 400 µL to 80 µL, enabling complete mixing in a 200 µL mixer and significant ripple attenuation.
• Flow consistency: Advanced pump control on the Vanquish Flex system compensated solvent thermal expansion/compression effects, halving baseline noise from 0.17 ± 0.01 mAU to 0.08 ± 0.01 mAU under identical 400 µL mixer conditions, without increased GDV.
Benefits and practical applications
The optimized Vanquish Flex Binary UHPLC delivers ultra-low TFA baseline noise and maintains low GDV, supporting high-throughput peptide and protein analyses with improved sensitivity. Flexible mixer options allow tuning of detection limits without sacrificing run times or requiring additional dampers.
Future trends and potential applications
Emerging developments may include further miniaturized pump architectures to reduce volume periods intrinsically, real-time flow diagnostics, and adaptive control algorithms for other challenging ion-pairing reagents. Integration with multidimensional LC workflows and coupling to high-resolution mass spectrometry could extend the benefits of low-noise TFA separations to advanced proteomics and bioanalysis.
Conclusion
The Vanquish Flex Binary UHPLC system, equipped with enhanced pump control, effectively minimizes TFA-related baseline disturbances while preserving low gradient delay volumes. This dual capability enables sensitive, high-throughput peptide and protein analyses without compromising chromatographic performance.
References
1. Thermo Scientific Technical Note 108: Reliable Solvent Mixing in UHPLC.
2. Winkler G. LCGC, 1987, 5(12), 1044–1045.
3. Thermo Scientific Poster Note 64807: UHPLC Optimization Study for Improved LC-MS Performance and Throughput.
4. Choikhet K., Glatz B., Rozing G. LC GC Europe, February 2003.
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