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Size exclusion chromatograph preparative

Several wide-porous affinity and size-exclusion chromatographic supports were prepared by Ivanov, Zubov et al. by means of acylation of aminopropyl-glass supports by copolymers of N-vinyl pyrrolidone (N-VP,1) and acryloyl chloride (AC,2), M = 7700 and 35000 respectively [50, 51]. The copolymers prepared by free radical copolymerization contain their units almost in equimolar proportion, with high tendency to alternation expected from the copolymerization parameters (rj = 0.035, r2 = 0.15 [52]). Residual carbonyl chloride groups of the chemisorbed copolymer could be transformed to 2-hydroxyethylamides which were solely... [Pg.153]

Columns used for size-exclusion chromatographic separations of macromolecules with different molecular masses are generally longer (25-100 cm) and broader (6-10 mm) than conventional analytical columns. Semi-preparative and preparative columns have internal diameters from 0.6 to 5 cm and even larger columns are used for industrial pilot-plant and process separations (see Chapter 6). [Pg.27]

A variety of procedures were utilized to analyze this reaction mixture and to characterize a,10-diaminopolystyrene. Thin layer chromatographic analysis using toluene as eluent exhibited three spots with Rf values of 0.85, 0.09, and 0.05 which corresponded to polystyrene, poly(styryl)amine and a,w-diaminopolystyrene (see Figure 1). Pure samples of each of these products were obtained by silica gel column Chromatography of the crude reaction mixture initially using toluene as eluent [for polystyrene and poly(styryl)amine] followed by a methanol/toluene mixture (5/100 v/v) for the diamine. Size-exclusion chromatography could not be used to characterize the diamine since no peak was observed for this material, apparently because of the complication of physical adsorption to the column packing material. Therefore, the dibenzoyl derivative (eq. 5) was prepared and used for most of the analytical characterizations. [Pg.143]

Sander et al. [63] investigated the effect of microparticulate silica pore size on the properties of solution-polymerized Cig stationary phases and observed both an increase in bonding density and shape recognition for wider pore (>120 A) silica. A size-exclusion mechanism was proposed, in which the reaction of the silane polymer on the surface is enhanced for wide pores and reduced for narrow pores. Polymeric Ci8 phases prepared on substrates with narrow pores exhibited monomeric-like chromatographic properties. This effect may be the result of an increase in competitive surface linkage with the less sterically hindered monomers that coexist with the bulkier oligomers that have polymerized in the reaction solution (Figure 5.13). [Pg.258]

In the case of gel permeation or size-exclusion HPLC (HP-SEC), selectivity arises from differential migration of the biomolecules as they permeate by diffusion from the bulk mobile phase to within the pore chambers of the stationary phase. Ideally, the stationary phase in HP-SEC has been so prepared that the surface itself has no chemical interaction with the biosolutes, with the extent of retardation simply mediated by the physical nature of the pores, their connectivity, and their tortuosity. In this regard, HP-SEC contrasts with the other modes of HPLC, where the surfaces of the stationary phase have been deliberately modified by chemical procedures by (usually) low molecular weight compounds to enable selective retardation of the biosolutes by adsorptive processes. Ideally, the surface of an interactive HPLC sorbent enables separation to occur by only one retention process, i.e., the stationary phase functions as a monomodal sorbent. In practice with porous materials, this is rarely achieved with the consequence that most adsorption HPLC sorbents exhibit multimodal characteristics. The retention behavior and selectivity of the chromatographic system will thus depend on the nature and magnitude of the complex interplay of intermolecular forces... [Pg.77]


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Chromatographic preparation

Size-exclusion

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