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Modulation of retention and selectivity in oil-in-water microemulsion liquid chromatography: A review.

Authors :
Pankajkumar-Patel, N.
Peris-García, E.
Ruiz-Angel, M.J.
Carda-Broch, S.
García-Alvarez-Coque, M.C.
Source :
Journal of Chromatography A. May2019, Vol. 1592, p91-100. 10p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Highlights • Modulation of retention in microemulsion liquid chromatography is described. • The contents of reagents for best retention, selectivity and resolution are given. • The viability and adequacy of isocratic and gradient elution are discussed. • Reported optimization strategies to facilitate method development are outlined. • Methodology used to prepare stable microemulsion systems is described. Abstract Microemulsions (MEs) are stable, isotropically clear solutions consisting of an oil and water stabilized by a surfactant and a co-surfactant. Oil-in-water microemuslion liquid chromatography (MELC) is a relatively new chromatographic mode, which uses an O/W ME as mobile phase. Retention, selectivity and efficiency can be modified by changing the concentration of the ME components and the ratio between the aqueous and oil phases. This work makes a critical survey on the information found in the literature about the mobile phase compositions that lead to the creation of successful O/W ME mobile phases, as well as the effect of pH for ionizable compounds and temperature. The viability of performing the analyses using isocratic and gradient elution is also considered. The complexity of the composition of a successful ME, and the fact that the different factors interact each other, may require many manipulations during method development to achieve an acceptable separation for complex mixtures. This is the reason of the proposal from several authors of a standard ME as starting point when developing a method for a new separation with no previous reports. Based on these initial conditions, the interest of several authors in applying computer-assisted approaches to optimize the composition of ME mobile phases, and reduce significantly the time and reagent consumption for method development, is described. Some practical tips are given to prepare stable ME mobile phases that yield reproducible results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219673
Volume :
1592
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Chromatography A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135746638
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chroma.2019.01.046