Benefits of Hydrogen in Liquid Chromatography. Introducing SHARC1 HPLC Columns
Technical notes | 2014 | SIELCInstrumentation
Hydrogen bonding is a fundamental molecular interaction that has been underutilized in liquid chromatography despite its ubiquity in gas chromatography and many other LC modes. The SHARC-1 stationary phase was specifically engineered to exploit pure hydrogen-bond donor and acceptor interactions for enhanced selectivity and separation power.
This work introduces SHARC-1 HPLC columns designed to separate analytes solely on their ability to donate or accept hydrogen bonds. The study demonstrates the method’s versatility across various compound classes and explores optimal mobile phase compositions to maximize retention, peak shape, and analysis speed.
The SHARC-1 column (3.2 × 100 mm, 3 μm particles) was operated with acetonitrile as the weak solvent and methanol as the strong solvent. Mobile phases typically contained formic acid (0.25–0.5%) and ammonium formate (0.01–0.05%). Flow rates ranged from 0.5 to 2.0 mL/min, with UV detection at 250–270 nm. The low viscosity of MeCN/MeOH mixtures enabled UPLC-like linear velocities on standard HPLC systems without excessive backpressure.
• Neurotransmitters (pseudoephedrine, norephedrine vs phenylephrine, norphenylephrine) were resolved based on the number of available hydrogen-bond sites, with N-methyl substitution reducing retention.
• Xanthine derivatives (caffeine, 1- and 3-methylxanthine, xanthine) showed retention gradients correlating with the number of free nitrogen sites.
• Aminopyridine isomers (2-, 3-, 4-aminopyridine) separated according to accessibility of amino groups.
• Phthalic, terephthalic, and isophthalic acids illustrated the impact of intramolecular hydrogen bonding on reduced retention for phthalic acid.
• Simple organic acids and pharmaceutical compounds (e.g., acetaminophen, benzoic acid) were efficiently separated under LC/MS-compatible conditions.
• Surfactants and water-sensitive molecules (e.g., Triton X100) retained proportional to oxygen content and preserved integrity in non-aqueous eluents.
• Viscosity measurements confirmed that MeCN/MeOH mixtures have significantly lower viscosity than water-based eluents, enabling faster separations.
• Exceptional selectivity for isomers, homologs, and degradation products based on hydrogen-bond interaction patterns.
• Fast analysis through low backpressure and compatibility with small-particle columns.
• Broad solubility range for highly polar to highly hydrophobic analytes in MeCN/MeOH systems.
• MS- and preparative-chromatography friendly eluents with low boiling points and potential for solvent recycling in isocratic methods.
Expanding hydrogen-bond chromatography to complex biological and environmental matrices promises new insights into molecular speciation. Integration with hybrid stationary phases combining reversed-phase, HILIC, and dedicated hydrogen-bond sites may further enhance multidimensional separation strategies. Automated method development tools leveraging hydrogen-bond selectivity could streamline workflows in QA/QC and research laboratories.
The SHARC-1 approach demonstrates that pure hydrogen-bond interactions can drive efficient, high-selectivity liquid chromatographic separations across diverse compound classes. This methodology offers significant advantages in speed, solvent compatibility, and analytical versatility, positioning hydrogen-bond chromatography as a valuable complement to established LC modes.
Consumables, LC columns, HPLC
IndustriesOther
ManufacturerSIELC
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Hydrogen bonding is a fundamental molecular interaction that has been underutilized in liquid chromatography despite its ubiquity in gas chromatography and many other LC modes. The SHARC-1 stationary phase was specifically engineered to exploit pure hydrogen-bond donor and acceptor interactions for enhanced selectivity and separation power.
Study Objectives and Overview
This work introduces SHARC-1 HPLC columns designed to separate analytes solely on their ability to donate or accept hydrogen bonds. The study demonstrates the method’s versatility across various compound classes and explores optimal mobile phase compositions to maximize retention, peak shape, and analysis speed.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The SHARC-1 column (3.2 × 100 mm, 3 μm particles) was operated with acetonitrile as the weak solvent and methanol as the strong solvent. Mobile phases typically contained formic acid (0.25–0.5%) and ammonium formate (0.01–0.05%). Flow rates ranged from 0.5 to 2.0 mL/min, with UV detection at 250–270 nm. The low viscosity of MeCN/MeOH mixtures enabled UPLC-like linear velocities on standard HPLC systems without excessive backpressure.
Main Results and Discussion
• Neurotransmitters (pseudoephedrine, norephedrine vs phenylephrine, norphenylephrine) were resolved based on the number of available hydrogen-bond sites, with N-methyl substitution reducing retention.
• Xanthine derivatives (caffeine, 1- and 3-methylxanthine, xanthine) showed retention gradients correlating with the number of free nitrogen sites.
• Aminopyridine isomers (2-, 3-, 4-aminopyridine) separated according to accessibility of amino groups.
• Phthalic, terephthalic, and isophthalic acids illustrated the impact of intramolecular hydrogen bonding on reduced retention for phthalic acid.
• Simple organic acids and pharmaceutical compounds (e.g., acetaminophen, benzoic acid) were efficiently separated under LC/MS-compatible conditions.
• Surfactants and water-sensitive molecules (e.g., Triton X100) retained proportional to oxygen content and preserved integrity in non-aqueous eluents.
• Viscosity measurements confirmed that MeCN/MeOH mixtures have significantly lower viscosity than water-based eluents, enabling faster separations.
Benefits and Practical Applications
• Exceptional selectivity for isomers, homologs, and degradation products based on hydrogen-bond interaction patterns.
• Fast analysis through low backpressure and compatibility with small-particle columns.
• Broad solubility range for highly polar to highly hydrophobic analytes in MeCN/MeOH systems.
• MS- and preparative-chromatography friendly eluents with low boiling points and potential for solvent recycling in isocratic methods.
Future Trends and Applications
Expanding hydrogen-bond chromatography to complex biological and environmental matrices promises new insights into molecular speciation. Integration with hybrid stationary phases combining reversed-phase, HILIC, and dedicated hydrogen-bond sites may further enhance multidimensional separation strategies. Automated method development tools leveraging hydrogen-bond selectivity could streamline workflows in QA/QC and research laboratories.
Conclusion
The SHARC-1 approach demonstrates that pure hydrogen-bond interactions can drive efficient, high-selectivity liquid chromatographic separations across diverse compound classes. This methodology offers significant advantages in speed, solvent compatibility, and analytical versatility, positioning hydrogen-bond chromatography as a valuable complement to established LC modes.
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