Tips and Tricks for HPLC and UHPLC
Presentations | 2016 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
HPLC and UHPLC are cornerstone techniques in analytical chemistry, enabling high-resolution separation, quantitation and identification of complex mixtures across pharmaceutical, food, environmental and industrial applications. Optimizing every aspect of the workflow—from solvent preparation to detector settings—is essential for robust and reproducible results.
This technical note by Thermo Fisher Scientific consolidates best practices for HPLC and UHPLC method development and operation. It covers critical parameters affecting mobile phase quality, pump performance, mixing efficiency, autosampler reliability, column conditioning and detector configuration.
Implementing these targeted recommendations in solvent preparation, pump operation, mixer selection, autosampler handling, column conditioning and detector settings can significantly elevate HPLC/UHPLC performance, delivering high resolution, precision and throughput in analytical workflows.
HPLC
IndustriesManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
HPLC and UHPLC are cornerstone techniques in analytical chemistry, enabling high-resolution separation, quantitation and identification of complex mixtures across pharmaceutical, food, environmental and industrial applications. Optimizing every aspect of the workflow—from solvent preparation to detector settings—is essential for robust and reproducible results.
Study Objectives and Overview
This technical note by Thermo Fisher Scientific consolidates best practices for HPLC and UHPLC method development and operation. It covers critical parameters affecting mobile phase quality, pump performance, mixing efficiency, autosampler reliability, column conditioning and detector configuration.
Methodology and Instrumentation
- UHPLC systems: Thermo Scientific Vanquish and UltiMate 3000 equipped with LPG and HPG pump designs.
- Static mixing: SpinFlow mixers ranging from 35 to 1550 µL to tailor mixing ripple vs. speed.
- Pumps: Low-pressure gradient (LPG) mixers for multi-solvent capability; high-pressure gradient (HPG) pumps for ultra-fast ballistic gradients.
- Autosampler modules with programmable draw speeds, transport liquid wash and pre-derivatization capabilities.
- Column compartment with pre-column heater employing low-dead-volume capillaries for temperature equilibration.
- Detectors: Variable wavelength detector (VWD) with true reference diode and diode array detector (DAD) for spectral acquisition.
Key Results and Discussion
- Mobile Phase Management: Pre-mixing organic and aqueous solvents at 5–10 % prevents local crystallization. Buffer concentrations must be controlled within ±3 mM to avoid retention shifts and resolution loss, and eluents with salts require regular replacement and filtration.
- Gradient Performance: LPG pumps achieve composition changes ≤2 % per stroke, suitable for gradients down to tens of seconds. HPG systems use precise acceleration/deceleration to enable ballistic gradients theoretically faster than one second.
- Mixing Ripple Control: Smaller mixers (35–100 µL) favor rapid separations for MS detection; medium volumes (200–400 µL) balance ripple and speed for UV; largest mixers (800–1550 µL) minimize baseline noise in UV-sensitive applications.
- Autosampler Optimization: Injection draw speed should match volume and viscosity (e.g., 2–3 µL/s for 10 µL). Use matched sample solvent to avoid peak distortion, minimize injection volumes when solvents are stronger than the mobile phase, and maintain clean vials and septa to reduce carry-over.
- Column Conditioning: Pre-column heating stabilizes analyte band broadening and prevents peak splitting, notably for thermally labile compounds, by rapidly equilibrating the mobile phase to the column temperature.
- Detector Settings: For VWD employ forward optics with a true reference diode. In DAD, avoid reference diodes in active absorption regions. Collect at least 30–40 data points per peak by setting data collection rates (20–100 Hz) and time constants (0.01–2 s), and adjust bandwidth (4–30 nm) to optimize signal-to-noise vs. resolution.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Enhanced chromatographic efficiency and reproducibility for diverse sample types including food additives, pharmaceuticals and environmental extracts.
- High-throughput capability demonstrated by ‘10 peaks in 10 seconds’ separations using ballistic gradients.
- Stable baselines and low noise levels through precise solvent handling, mixing design and detector optimization.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
- Development of sub-second gradient systems and microfluidic mixing for ultra-fast chromatography.
- Integration of machine-learning algorithms for automated method tuning and real-time performance monitoring.
- Expansion of UHPLC to advanced stationary phases and high-temperature applications to further improve throughput and peak capacity.
Conclusion
Implementing these targeted recommendations in solvent preparation, pump operation, mixer selection, autosampler handling, column conditioning and detector settings can significantly elevate HPLC/UHPLC performance, delivering high resolution, precision and throughput in analytical workflows.
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