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From HPLC to UHPLC: What are the Instrumental Requirements and Pitfalls?

Presentations | 2016 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
HPLC
Industries
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Thermo Fisher Scientific

Summary

Importance of the topic



The conversion from conventional high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) to ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) has become essential in modern analytical laboratories. By employing shorter columns packed with sub-2 µm particles, analysts can achieve equivalent or improved chromatographic efficiency in a fraction of the time. This evolution supports faster turnaround, reduced solvent consumption and lower sample demands, addressing high-throughput requirements in pharmaceutical, environmental and quality control sectors.

Objectives and overview



This whitepaper by Dr. Markus M. Martin examines the instrumental prerequisites and potential challenges encountered when migrating methods from HPLC to UHPLC. It outlines critical factors affecting gradient formation, extra-column contributions and detector performance, offering a strategic framework to optimize speed without sacrificing resolution or reproducibility.

Methodology and instrumentation



Analytical systems were dissected into key components: the pump (with its maximum pressure rating, gradient delay volume), the autosampler and capillaries (extra-column volume, internal diameter), the column compartment, and the detector (flow cell volume, data collection rate and filter settings). High-pressure mixers, low-volume connections (e.g., viper fittings), micro- or narrow-bore capillaries and properly sized UV flow cells or mass spectrometer interfaces were emphasized to minimize dispersion.

Main results and discussion



  • Gradient delay volume (GDV) directly impacts the actual gradient reaching the column head, influencing retention times and isocratic hold periods. Lower GDV accelerates initial gradient delivery and shortens column equilibration, which is critical for runs under 5 minutes.
  • Extra column volume (ECV) outside the column causes significant peak broadening, particularly with narrow-bore columns. Optimizing capillary dimensions and employing zero-dead-volume fittings restored >80% of column efficiency at k≈2.
  • Detector flow cell volumes must remain below 10% of the smallest peak volume to avoid coalescence of adjacent peaks. Data collection rates of ≥10 Hz (cycle times ≤0.1 s) combined with appropriate response times ensure retention time precision (SD <0.001 min) for peaks as narrow as 1.5 s.
  • Core-shell (solid-core) superficially porous particles enable method transfer from 5 µm HPLC columns to 2.6 µm UHPLC formats, achieving up to 6 × faster gradients at comparable resolution, provided fluidic dispersion is controlled.

Benefits and practical applications



Implementing these recommendations permits laboratories to dramatically shorten analysis times (up to 6-fold), lower solvent and sample consumption, and maintain or improve separation performance. These enhancements support high-throughput bioanalysis, impurity profiling, environmental monitoring and routine quality control workflows.

Future trends and possibilities



Further miniaturization toward microflow and nano-UHPLC, integration with high-resolution mass spectrometry, and automated optimization algorithms will drive greater sensitivity and efficiency. Novel stationary phases, advanced mixer designs and AI-assisted method development promise to simplify UHPLC adoption for complex sample matrices.

Conclusion



Transitioning from HPLC to UHPLC demands careful management of gradient delay and extra-column volumes, appropriate detector settings and robust fluidic connections. By aligning system components and using specialized fittings, analysts can unlock rapid, high-resolution separations without compromising reproducibility.

References



No references were provided in the source document.

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