Achieving Solvent Reduction and Lower Running Costs with Nexera X4
Applications | 2026 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
Reducing solvent consumption in liquid chromatography addresses both environmental sustainability and laboratory operating costs. Organic mobile phases are a major recurring expense and a significant source of chemical waste in analytical labs. Downscaling chromatographic methods by adopting narrow-bore columns (e.g., 1.0 mm inner diameter) can substantially lower solvent usage provided instrument design preserves chromatographic performance. Demonstrating robust, low-dispersion operation with small-diameter columns is therefore important for widespread adoption of greener, lower-cost LC analyses.
This application note reports a case study demonstrating solvent and cost reduction by combining the Nexera X4 liquid chromatograph with a 1.0 mm I.D. Shim-pack NovaCore C18-HB column. The goals were to:
A mixed standard of eight small-molecule pharmaceuticals was used as the model sample. The principal experimental approach was to run gradient separations on a 50 mm × 1.0 mm, 1.7 µm Shim-pack NovaCore C18-HB column and compare solvent consumption and peak shapes to larger-bore columns and to a typical UHPLC system.
Key analytical parameters (summarized from the original table):
The study used the Nexera X4 UHPLC system (Shimadzu) coupled with a Shim-pack NovaCore C18-HB 1.0 mm column and an SPD-M40 X4 UV detector. Nexera X4 is emphasized for its low-dispersion flow path and minimized internal volumes to preserve column performance when small-diameter columns and low flow rates are employed.
Downscaling LC methods using 1.0 mm I.D. columns offers a straightforward route to major solvent and cost savings. Realizing these savings without loss of chromatographic performance depends on instrument design that controls extra-column dispersion and supports accurate low-volume injections. The Nexera X4 system demonstrated the ability to preserve sharp peak shapes and efficient separations at low flow rates, making narrow-bore approaches viable for routine analytical use with clear economic and environmental benefits.
Shimadzu Corporation. Nexera X4 application note: Achieving Solvent Reduction and Lower Running Costs with Nexera X4. First Edition, February 2026.
HPLC, Consumables, LC columns
IndustriesPharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerShimadzu
Summary
Solvent Reduction in HPLC Using Nexera X4 and 1-mm-ID Columns
Importance of the topic
Reducing solvent consumption in liquid chromatography addresses both environmental sustainability and laboratory operating costs. Organic mobile phases are a major recurring expense and a significant source of chemical waste in analytical labs. Downscaling chromatographic methods by adopting narrow-bore columns (e.g., 1.0 mm inner diameter) can substantially lower solvent usage provided instrument design preserves chromatographic performance. Demonstrating robust, low-dispersion operation with small-diameter columns is therefore important for widespread adoption of greener, lower-cost LC analyses.
Objectives and overview of the article
This application note reports a case study demonstrating solvent and cost reduction by combining the Nexera X4 liquid chromatograph with a 1.0 mm I.D. Shim-pack NovaCore C18-HB column. The goals were to:
- Quantify solvent savings when scaling column diameter from typical 3.0 mm and 2.1 mm formats down to 1.0 mm (at equal linear velocity),
- Confirm that Nexera X4’s low-dispersion flow path supports sharp peak shapes with narrow-bore columns, and
- Demonstrate practical chromatographic performance for a mixture of eight small-molecule pharmaceuticals.
Methodology
A mixed standard of eight small-molecule pharmaceuticals was used as the model sample. The principal experimental approach was to run gradient separations on a 50 mm × 1.0 mm, 1.7 µm Shim-pack NovaCore C18-HB column and compare solvent consumption and peak shapes to larger-bore columns and to a typical UHPLC system.
Key analytical parameters (summarized from the original table):
- Column: Shim-pack NovaCore C18-HB, 50 mm × 1.0 mm I.D., 1.7 µm
- Mobile phase: Pump A = 0.1% formic acid in water; Pump B = acetonitrile; gradient 5% B (0 min) → 70% B (3 min) → 5% B (3–8 min)
- Column temperature: 50 °C
- Flow rate: 0.10 mL/min (linear velocity maintained when comparing different IDs)
- Mixer: micro mixer; sample loop: 15 µL; injection volume: 0.3 µL
- Detection: UV at 254 nm (SPD-M40 X4, standard cell)
- Analytes: (A) Antipyrine, (B) Benzoic acid, (C) Salicylic acid, (D) Hydrocortisone, (E) Furosemide, (F) Naproxen, (G) Probenecid, (H) Diclofenac
Used instrumentation
The study used the Nexera X4 UHPLC system (Shimadzu) coupled with a Shim-pack NovaCore C18-HB 1.0 mm column and an SPD-M40 X4 UV detector. Nexera X4 is emphasized for its low-dispersion flow path and minimized internal volumes to preserve column performance when small-diameter columns and low flow rates are employed.
Main results and discussion
- Solvent savings: Maintaining constant linear velocity, moving from a 3.0 mm column to a 1.0 mm column resulted in approximately a 9-fold reduction in solvent consumption. Switching from a 2.1 mm column to a 1.0 mm column produced about a 4.5-fold reduction. These values were normalized to the 3.0 mm column’s consumption taken as 100%.
- Chromatographic performance: Chromatograms obtained with the Nexera X4 and the 1.0 mm column showed sharp, well-defined peaks for all eight analytes under the applied gradient and low-flow conditions. A comparison with a typical UHPLC system running the same column revealed that Nexera X4 produced significantly narrower peaks, indicating lower extra-column dispersion and better preservation of column efficiency.
- Operational considerations: Achieving reliable performance at very low flow rates (0.1 mL/min) and sub-microliter effective injection volumes requires minimized system void volumes and accurate, low-volume injection capability. Nexera X4’s design addresses these needs through a low-dispersion flow path and micro-mixing components.
Benefits and practical applications
- Cost reduction: Substantially lower mobile phase consumption directly reduces reagent costs and waste disposal expenses.
- Environmental impact: Lower solvent usage decreases hazardous waste volumes and the laboratory carbon footprint associated with solvent procurement, transport, and disposal.
- Method translation: Laboratories running large numbers of routine assays—pharmaceutical QC, formulation analysis, environmental screening—can downscale methods to narrow-bore columns to achieve throughput and sensitivity while saving solvent.
- Performance retention: With appropriate instrumentation design (low extra-column dispersion), chromatographic separation quality can be preserved despite the reduced column diameter and flow rate.
Future trends and application opportunities
- Broader adoption of narrow-bore and capillary LC formats as instrument designs evolve to minimize extra-column dispersion and deliver reliable low-flow performance.
- Integration with mass spectrometry: Lower flow rates are advantageous for direct coupling to electrospray MS, improving ionization efficiency and reducing solvent load on MS interfaces.
- Method standardization for green analytical chemistry: Development of validated workflows that prioritize solvent reduction without compromising regulatory requirements for QC/QA.
- Automation and high-throughput: Combining narrow-bore methods with automated sample handling can maintain or increase sample throughput while reducing per-sample solvent consumption.
Conclusion
Downscaling LC methods using 1.0 mm I.D. columns offers a straightforward route to major solvent and cost savings. Realizing these savings without loss of chromatographic performance depends on instrument design that controls extra-column dispersion and supports accurate low-volume injections. The Nexera X4 system demonstrated the ability to preserve sharp peak shapes and efficient separations at low flow rates, making narrow-bore approaches viable for routine analytical use with clear economic and environmental benefits.
Reference
Shimadzu Corporation. Nexera X4 application note: Achieving Solvent Reduction and Lower Running Costs with Nexera X4. First Edition, February 2026.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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