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Fused-core particle

As an alternative to wholly porous sub-2-pm particles, 1.7-pm fused-core particles surrounded by a 0.5-pm porous silica layer with 90 A pores, have emerged. In a comparative study, substantially lower back pressure was reported when the fused-core particles were used. This allowed for columns to be coupled in series, which increased the peak efficiency up to 92,750 plates (164). Wider-pore fused-core particles have an average pore diameter of 160 A. The wider-pore particles are particularly useful for increased sample loading and the rapid separation of peptides using volatile mobile phases (165). [Pg.127]

Salisbury, J.J., Fused-core particles A practical alternative to sub-2 micron particles, J. Chromatogr. Sci., 46(10), 883, 2008. [Pg.275]

Cunliffe, J.M. and Maloney, T.D., Fused-core particle technology as an alternative to sub-2-microm particles to achieve high separation efficiency with low backpressure, J. Sep. Sci., 30(18), 3104, 2007. [Pg.275]

It should be mentioned that there is another type of relatively new column that is made from the 2.7-pm fused-core silica particles, bonded with C18 alkyl chains, by fusing a 0.5-pm porous silica layer onto 1.7-pm non-porous silica cores. The selectivity of the fused-core particle columns is very similar to that of certain <2-pm C18 columns and has the advantage of a substantially lower back-pressure at much higher flow rates, which allows rapid separations to be performed even routinely on a conventional LC system without significant loss in efficiency or resolution. The fused-core columns are new to antibiotic analysis and may serve as good alternatives to <2-pm columns in the field. [Pg.200]

Figure 22-17 van Deemter curves Plate height as a function of linear flow rate (mtn/s) for microporous (Hgure 22-18) stationary phase particle diameters of 5A 3-5, and 1.8 icm. as well as superficially porous (or fused-core) particles (Rgure 22-19) with a diameter of 2.7 p.m and a 0.5- i,m porous layer thickness. Measurements for naphthalene eluted from Cu-silica (50 mm long x 4.6 mm diameter) with 60 vol% acetonitrile/40 vol% H,0 at 24 C. (Courtesy MAC-MOO Analytical, Chadds Ford, RA.]... [Pg.492]

Figure 22-19 shows rapid separation of proteins on superficially porous particles (also called fused-core particles), which consist of a 0.25-p.m-thick porous silica layer on a 5-p,m-diameter nonporous silica core. A stationary phase such as C]g is bonded throughout the thin, porous outer layer. Diffusion of solute into a... [Pg.492]

Fused-core Fused-core particle Short diffnsion path Lower back pressure Higher solvent... [Pg.138]

Core-shell silica or fused-core particle (depending on manufacturer) 2.7 pm (1.7-pm solid core, 0.5-pm porous shell) (1.7-pm particles also available) Achieves UHPLC conditions with an HPLC (2.7-pm particles) Smaller 1.7-pm type used for UHPLC ... [Pg.554]

Chocholous, P., L. Kosarova, D. Satinsky et al. 2011. Enhance capabilities of separation in sequential injection chromatography—Fused-core particle column and its comparison with narrow-bore monolithic column. Talanta 85 1129-1134. [Pg.27]


See other pages where Fused-core particle is mentioned: [Pg.340]    [Pg.270]    [Pg.1043]    [Pg.1298]    [Pg.558]    [Pg.567]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.2126]    [Pg.310]    [Pg.396]    [Pg.553]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.300]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.492 , Pg.492 , Pg.493 ]




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