There is More to HPLC Than Reverse Phase - Column choices: Have you thought about the rest?
Presentations | 2019 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) traditionally relies on reverse-phase C18 columns, but many analytes and applications benefit from alternative chemistries and separation modes. Polar compounds, stereoisomers, biomolecules, and complex mixtures often require greater selectivity, faster analysis times, or orthogonal separations that go beyond standard C18 methods.
The article surveys a range of chromatographic techniques and column chemistries available for analyses that extend past reverse-phase HPLC. It describes how switching bonded phases, adopting supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC), chiral separations, hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC), ion exchange chromatography (IEX), and size exclusion chromatography (SEC) can improve method performance and address challenging separations.
The review outlines fundamental interactions—hydrophobic, ionic, π-π, dipole, and steric—exploited by different stationary phases. It details typical mobile-phase compositions and gradient conditions for each mode. Instrumentation examples include the Agilent 1260 Infinity hybrid SFC/UHPLC system with single-quadrupole mass spectrometry, capable of seamless switching between SFC and UHPLC operations.
The alternative modes extend the versatility of HPLC by delivering orthogonal selectivity, improved peak capacity, reduced run times, enhanced compatibility with MS detection, and preservation of biomolecule integrity. These methods support analytical, preparative, and process-monitoring needs in pharmaceutical, environmental, food, and industrial laboratories.
Adopting chromatographic techniques beyond reverse-phase C18 opens new avenues for tackling challenging separations. By selecting appropriate column chemistries and modes—SFC, chiral, HIC, IEX, or SEC—analysts can achieve superior selectivity, speed, and robustness, meeting diverse application requirements across research and industry.
Consumables, LC columns
IndustriesManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the Topic
High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) traditionally relies on reverse-phase C18 columns, but many analytes and applications benefit from alternative chemistries and separation modes. Polar compounds, stereoisomers, biomolecules, and complex mixtures often require greater selectivity, faster analysis times, or orthogonal separations that go beyond standard C18 methods.
Objectives and Study Overview
The article surveys a range of chromatographic techniques and column chemistries available for analyses that extend past reverse-phase HPLC. It describes how switching bonded phases, adopting supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC), chiral separations, hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC), ion exchange chromatography (IEX), and size exclusion chromatography (SEC) can improve method performance and address challenging separations.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The review outlines fundamental interactions—hydrophobic, ionic, π-π, dipole, and steric—exploited by different stationary phases. It details typical mobile-phase compositions and gradient conditions for each mode. Instrumentation examples include the Agilent 1260 Infinity hybrid SFC/UHPLC system with single-quadrupole mass spectrometry, capable of seamless switching between SFC and UHPLC operations.
Main Results and Discussion
- SFC employs supercritical CO₂ modified with polar solvents (e.g., methanol) for rapid, efficient separations of small to moderate molecular weight compounds, including chiral and achiral targets.
- Chiral chromatography uses stationary phases bearing chiral selectors (cyclofructans, cyclodextrins, vancomycin, teicoplanin) and operates in polar ionic, reversed-phase, polar organic, or normal-phase modes to resolve enantiomers by multiple interaction types.
- HIC separates proteins under non-denaturing conditions by exploiting hydrophobic interactions modulated via salt gradients (e.g., ammonium sulfate/phosphate buffer), enabling aggregate and variant profiling of monoclonal antibodies and ADCs.
- IEX achieves charge-based separations on strong/weak anion or cation exchange resins with salt or pH gradients, offering high resolution of protein charge variants without denaturation.
- SEC (also gel filtration) separates molecules by hydrodynamic size using porous packings, critical for characterizing aggregates, fragments, and monomers in biotherapeutic quality control.
Benefits and Practical Applications
The alternative modes extend the versatility of HPLC by delivering orthogonal selectivity, improved peak capacity, reduced run times, enhanced compatibility with MS detection, and preservation of biomolecule integrity. These methods support analytical, preparative, and process-monitoring needs in pharmaceutical, environmental, food, and industrial laboratories.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
- Development of hybrid and superficially porous particles with tailored functionalities for higher efficiency and throughput.
- Integration of multi-dimensional and automated method scouting workflows powered by machine learning for rapid method optimization.
- Expansion of green chromatography with CO₂-based mobile phases and reduced organic solvent use.
- Tight coupling with high-resolution mass spectrometry for comprehensive structural and quantitative analyses.
Conclusion
Adopting chromatographic techniques beyond reverse-phase C18 opens new avenues for tackling challenging separations. By selecting appropriate column chemistries and modes—SFC, chiral, HIC, IEX, or SEC—analysts can achieve superior selectivity, speed, and robustness, meeting diverse application requirements across research and industry.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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