Eluent Suppressors for Ion Chromatography
Technical notes | 2016 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Suppressors play a central role in modern ion chromatography by dramatically lowering background eluent conductivity while boosting analyte signals. This dual effect enhances signal-to-noise ratios, reduces detection limits, and expands the dynamic range of IC methods in water quality monitoring, industrial process control, and biochemical analysis.
This white paper surveys the evolution and performance of five Dionex eluent suppressors introduced since 1975: the Self-Regenerating Suppressor (SRS 300), the Capillary Electrolytic Suppressor (CES 300), the MicroMembrane™ Suppressor (MMS 300), the Anion Ion-Exclusion Suppressor (AMMS-ICE 300), and the Atlas® Electrolytic Suppressors (AES®/CAES™). It compares their operating principles, regeneration modes, capacity, noise characteristics, solvent compatibility, and applications across standard-bore and capillary IC formats.
Suppressors exchange eluent counterions for low-conductivity regenerant ions either electrolytically or chemically. Key components include:
Performance comparisons highlight:
Modern suppressors deliver:
Advances may include novel membrane materials and microfabrication for even lower dead volumes, integration of suppressors with mass spectrometry interfaces, AI-driven method optimization, greener regeneration chemistries, and wider adoption in biopharmaceutical and clinical analytics.
The development of electrolytic and chemical suppressors has transformed IC by enabling ultra-low noise, high-capacity eluent suppression across a broad range of applications. Dionex’s suite of suppressors addresses demands from capillary-scale to preparative flow rates, paving the way for more sensitive, robust, and reagent-free ion analysis.
Dionex Corporation. Advances in Chemical Suppression. Brochure LPN 1855.
Ion chromatography
IndustriesManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Suppressors play a central role in modern ion chromatography by dramatically lowering background eluent conductivity while boosting analyte signals. This dual effect enhances signal-to-noise ratios, reduces detection limits, and expands the dynamic range of IC methods in water quality monitoring, industrial process control, and biochemical analysis.
Objectives and Overview
This white paper surveys the evolution and performance of five Dionex eluent suppressors introduced since 1975: the Self-Regenerating Suppressor (SRS 300), the Capillary Electrolytic Suppressor (CES 300), the MicroMembrane™ Suppressor (MMS 300), the Anion Ion-Exclusion Suppressor (AMMS-ICE 300), and the Atlas® Electrolytic Suppressors (AES®/CAES™). It compares their operating principles, regeneration modes, capacity, noise characteristics, solvent compatibility, and applications across standard-bore and capillary IC formats.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Suppressors exchange eluent counterions for low-conductivity regenerant ions either electrolytically or chemically. Key components include:
- Ion chromatography system (Dionex ICS or DX series)
- High-pressure pump or eluent generator (quaternary/piston pump or Reagent-Free™ IC EG cartridges)
- Suppressor device (SRS 300, CES 300, MMS 300, AMMS-ICE 300, AES/CAES)
- Conductivity detector (ED20/25, CD20/25, IC25A) with optimal cell design
- Regeneration modules: gas-assisted kits, displacement chemical regeneration, external water or pressurized reservoir kits
- Software and controllers: Chromeleon 6.2+, RFC-10/30 Reagent-Free Controller for current control
Key Results and Discussion
Performance comparisons highlight:
- SRS 300: High capacity (up to 200 µeq/min), electrolytic regeneration, low noise, versatile for hydroxide and methanesulfonic acid eluents, ideal for gradient operation.
- MMS 300: Chemical regeneration with lowest noise and solvent compatibility up to 100%, fast startup, displacement chemical regeneration (DCR) or pressurized bottle operation.
- AMMS-ICE 300: Chemically regenerated ion-exclusion suppressor optimized for organic acids, tolerates HPLC solvents, robust at 40 °C.
- CES 300: Microflow (5–30 µL/min) electrolytic suppressor for capillary IC, minimal void volume (<1.5 µL), effective for sub-2 µL analyses with high peak efficiency.
- AES/CAES: MonoDisc monolithic design for rapid startup and stable baselines with carbonate/bicarbonate or methanesulfonic/sulfuric acid eluents up to 25 mN at 1 mL/min.
Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method
Modern suppressors deliver:
- Enhanced detection limits (ppb and sub-ppb levels) for inorganic anions/cations in environmental and pharmaceutical assays.
- Improved peak efficiency and reproducibility in routine water-quality and beverage analyses.
- Compatibility with gradient elution, organic solvents, and capillary formats for trace-level and high-throughput screening.
- Reagent-free IC options reducing manual reagent preparation and waste.
Future Trends and Possibilities
Advances may include novel membrane materials and microfabrication for even lower dead volumes, integration of suppressors with mass spectrometry interfaces, AI-driven method optimization, greener regeneration chemistries, and wider adoption in biopharmaceutical and clinical analytics.
Conclusion
The development of electrolytic and chemical suppressors has transformed IC by enabling ultra-low noise, high-capacity eluent suppression across a broad range of applications. Dionex’s suite of suppressors addresses demands from capillary-scale to preparative flow rates, paving the way for more sensitive, robust, and reagent-free ion analysis.
Reference
Dionex Corporation. Advances in Chemical Suppression. Brochure LPN 1855.
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