What is the Role of a Next Generation Suppressor?
Technical notes | 2013 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
In ion chromatography (IC) suppression technology is indispensable for enhancing signal-to-noise ratio by reducing background conductivity and boosting analyte responses. Such improvements are critical in environmental monitoring, food safety, pharmaceutical quality control and industrial analytics where trace-level ionic contaminants must be reliably detected.
This white paper examines the evolution of suppressor designs from early packed-bed devices to modern electrolytically regenerated systems. It outlines emerging performance requirements—higher backpressure tolerance, improved peak efficiency for sub-5 µm columns and robust regeneration—and presents the Thermo Scientific™ Dionex™ ERS™ 500 as a representative next-generation solution.
IC suppression operates by ion-exchange: the conductive eluent is delivered under pressure, separation occurs in the column, and the suppressor replaces eluent counterions with low-conductivity ions. Key milestones include:
The Dionex ERS 500 exemplifies next-generation design:
The ERS 500 demonstrates:
The improved suppressor technology delivers:
Advancements are expected in:
Next-generation suppressors such as the Dionex ERS 500 address critical performance needs—robust regeneration, high backpressure tolerance and low dispersion—paving the way for more sensitive and versatile IC applications. Their reagent-free, electrolytic design simplifies workflows and supports emerging hyphenated detection methods.
Ion chromatography
IndustriesManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
In ion chromatography (IC) suppression technology is indispensable for enhancing signal-to-noise ratio by reducing background conductivity and boosting analyte responses. Such improvements are critical in environmental monitoring, food safety, pharmaceutical quality control and industrial analytics where trace-level ionic contaminants must be reliably detected.
Objectives and Study Overview
This white paper examines the evolution of suppressor designs from early packed-bed devices to modern electrolytically regenerated systems. It outlines emerging performance requirements—higher backpressure tolerance, improved peak efficiency for sub-5 µm columns and robust regeneration—and presents the Thermo Scientific™ Dionex™ ERS™ 500 as a representative next-generation solution.
Methodology
IC suppression operates by ion-exchange: the conductive eluent is delivered under pressure, separation occurs in the column, and the suppressor replaces eluent counterions with low-conductivity ions. Key milestones include:
- Packed-bed chemical suppressors requiring offline acid/base regeneration, limited by dispersion and low-capacity columns.
- Continuously regenerated chemical suppressors using acid or base flows, enabling larger sample loads and improved sensitivity.
- Electrolytically regenerated suppressors producing regeneration ions via water electrolysis, eliminating reagent handling and simplifying maintenance.
Used Instrumentation
The Dionex ERS 500 exemplifies next-generation design:
- Electrolytically regenerated suppressor allowing reagent-free operation with eluent-derived water.
- Backpressure tolerance up to 900 psi to support hyphenated detectors (UV-Vis, MS, ICP-MS).
- Optimized flow path minimizing dispersion for high-efficiency separations with 4 µm particle columns.
- High current efficiency and static capacity ensuring stable baseline recovery after idle periods without requiring chemical regeneration.
Main Results and Discussion
The ERS 500 demonstrates:
- Consistent suppression across concentration gradients and elevated eluent strengths, maintaining low background conductivity.
- Sharp peak shapes on small-particle columns, supporting high theoretical plate counts and fast separations.
- Stable operation during method start-ups and backpressure fluctuations, extending compatibility with diverse detection systems.
Benefits and Practical Applications
The improved suppressor technology delivers:
- Enhanced sensitivity and lower detection limits for ionic analytes.
- Reduced maintenance and downtime through reagent-free regeneration.
- Compatibility with hyphenated techniques, enabling multi-modality analysis in environmental, pharmaceutical and industrial laboratories.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Advancements are expected in:
- Further miniaturization and integration of suppressors into micro- and nano-scale IC systems.
- Active pressure compensation and real-time monitoring to support even higher backpressures.
- Smart suppressors with self-diagnostic features and IoT connectivity for automated maintenance alerts.
Conclusion
Next-generation suppressors such as the Dionex ERS 500 address critical performance needs—robust regeneration, high backpressure tolerance and low dispersion—paving the way for more sensitive and versatile IC applications. Their reagent-free, electrolytic design simplifies workflows and supports emerging hyphenated detection methods.
References
- Dionex ERS 500 Suppressor Brochure.
- Thermo Scientific Dionex Eluent Suppressors Technical Datasheet.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific White Papers on Suppressor Technologies.
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