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Macroporous packings

FIGURE 1.3 15- m macroporous packing material, (a) Narrow particle-size distribution, (b) Close-... [Pg.20]

Toyopearl HW size exclusion chromatography resins are macroporous packings for bioprocessing chromatography. They are applicable for process-scale... [Pg.145]

Tyrosine-containing peptides Polyacrylamide poly(ethylene glycol) macroporous packing Acetonitrile-10 mM Tris, 15 mM boric acid, pH 8.2 (47 53) 250 mm x 100 pm i.d. 205 mm packed length 36... [Pg.405]

These hydrophilic macroporous packings for classic ion exchange chromatography of biopolymers, and methods of their application are described in detail in commercial brochures available on request [19,20]. [Pg.206]

Indeed, microbeaded styrene-DVB copolymers, of which macroporous packings of the type PLRP-S (Varian, Polymer Laboratories) and PRP (Hamilton) are most popular, are predominandy used for SEC examination of macromolecules. For the cafibration of the columns, polystyrene standards of varying molecular size as well as dialkyl phthalate, butyrophenone, acetophenone, toluene, etc., dissolved in THF, are used [183]. Molecular sizes, < > (A), of the above test molecules are usually calculated from their molecular weights, M , according to the equation [184] ... [Pg.504]

Adsorption of supercritical gases takes place predominantly in pores which are less than four or five molecular diameters in width. As the pore width increases, the forces responsible for the adsorption process decrease rapidly such that the equilibrium adsorption diminishes to that of a plane surface. Thus, any pores with widths greater than 2 nm (meso- and macropores) are not useful for enhancement of methane storage, but may be necessary for transport into and out of the adsorbent micropores. To maximize adsorption storage of methane, it is necessary to maximize the fractional volume of the micropores (<2 nm pore wall separation) per unit volume of adsorbent. Macropore volume and void volume in a storage system (adsorbent packed storage vessel) should be minimized [18, 19]. [Pg.281]

Isotherm measurements of methane at 298 K can be made either by a gravimetric method using a high pressure microbalance [31], or by using a volumetric method [32]. Both of these methods require correction for the nonideality of methane, but both methods result in the same isotherm for any specific adsorbent [20]. The volumetric method can also be used for measurement of total storage. Here it is not necessary to differentiate between the adsorbed phase and that remaining in the gas phase in void space and macropore volume, but simply to evaluate the total amount of methane in the adsorbent filled vessel. To obtain the maximum storage capacity for the adsorbent, it would be necessary to optimally pack the vessel. [Pg.285]

From isotherm measurements, usually earried out on small quantities of adsorbent, the methane uptake per unit mass of adsorbent is obtained. Sinee storage in a fixed volnme is dependent on the uptake per unit volume of adsorbent and not on the uptake per unit mass of adsorbent, it is neeessary to eonvert the mass uptake to a volume uptake. In this way an estimate of the possible storage capacity of an adsorbent can be made. To do this, the mass uptake has to be multiplied by the density of the adsorbent. Ihis density, for a powdered or granular material, should be the packing (bulk) density of the adsorbent, or the piece density if the adsorbent is in the form of a monolith. Thus a carbon adsorbent which adsorbs 150 mg methane per gram at 3.5 MPa and has a packed density of 0.50 g/ml, would store 75 g methane per liter plus any methane which is in the gas phase in the void or macropore volume. This can be multiplied by 1.5 to convert to the more popular unit, V/V. [Pg.285]

The advantages of monosized chromatographic supports are as follows a uniform column packing, uniform flow velocity profile, low back pressure, high resolution, and high-speed separation compared with the materials of broad size distribution. Optical micrographs of 20-p,m monosized macroporous particles and a commercial chromatography resin of size 12-28 p,m are shown in Fig. 1.4. There is a clear difference in the size distribution between the monodispersed particles and the traditional column material (87). [Pg.19]

Size exclusion chromatography (SEC, also known as GPC and GFC) has become a very well accepted separation method since its introduction in the late-1950s by works of Porath and Flodin (1) and Moore (2). Polymers Standards Service (PSS) packings for SEC/SEC columns share this long-standing tradition as universal and stable sorbents for all types of polymer applications. In general, PSS SEC columns are filled with spherical, macroporous cross-linked, pressure-stable, and pH-resistant polymeric gels. [Pg.267]

The chemical nature of the packing has the largest influence on the retention of molecules and a big impact on the efficiency of the separation itself. The chemical and physical properties of the sorbent are determined by the choice of the comonomers for the copolymerization. The type of the copolymerization process employed by the synthetic chemist introduces the macroporous structure into the sorbent and determines the surface topology (accessibility, resolution) and the surface chemistry of the packing (4). [Pg.269]

A packed-bed nonpermselective membrane reactor (PBNMR) is presented by Diakov et al. [31], who increased the operational stability in the partial oxidation of methanol by feeding oxygen directly and methanol through a macroporous stainless steel membrane to the PB. Al-Juaied et al. [32] used an inert membrane to distribute either oxygen or ethylene in the selective ethylene oxidation. By accounting for the proper kinetics of the reaction, the selectivity and yield of ethylene oxide could be enhanced over the fixed-bed reactor operation. [Pg.218]

Macroporous Chesieally Bonded and Polymer Encapsulated Packings... [Pg.167]


See other pages where Macroporous packings is mentioned: [Pg.689]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.361]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.689]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.361]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.350]    [Pg.866]    [Pg.543]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.309]    [Pg.674]    [Pg.674]    [Pg.678]    [Pg.820]    [Pg.820]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.113]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.29 ]




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