Latex-Coated Polymeric Monolithic Ion-Exchange Stationary Phases. 1. Anion-Exchange Capillary Electrochromatography and In-Line Sample Preconcentration in Capillary Electrophoresis
- 7 December 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Analytical Chemistry
- Vol. 77 (2) , 407-416
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ac048748d
Abstract
A sulfonated methacrylate monolithic polymer has been synthesized inside fused-silica capillaries of diameters 50−533-μm i.d. and coated with 65-nm-diameter fully functionalized quaternary ammonium latex particles (AS18, Dionex Corp.) to form an anion-exchange stationary phase. This stationary phase was used for ion-exchange capillary electrochromatography of inorganic anions in a 75-μm-i.d. capillary with Tris/perchlorate electrolyte and direct UV detection at 195 nm. Seven inorganic anions (bromide, nitrate, iodide, iodate, bromate, thiocyanate, chromate) could be separated over a period of 90 s, and the elution order indicated that both ion exchange and electrophoresis contributed to the separation mechanism. Separation efficiencies of up to 1.66 × 105 plates m-1 were achieved, and the monoliths were stable under pressures of up to 62 MPa. Another latex-coated monolith in a 250-μm-i.d. capillary was used for in-line preconcentration by coupling it to a separation capillary in which the EOF had been reversed using a coating of either a cationic polymer or cationic latex particles. Several capillary volumes of sample were loaded onto the preconcentration monolith, and the analytes (inorganic anions) were then eluted from the monolith with a transient isotachophoretic gradient before being separated by electrophoresis in the separation capillary. Linear calibration curves were obtained for aqueous mixtures of bromide, nitrite, nitrate, and iodide. Recoveries of all analytes except iodide were reduced significantly when the sample matrix contained high levels of chloride. The preconcentration method was applied to the determination of iodide in open ocean water and provided a limit of detection of 75 pM (9.5 ng/L) calculated at a signal-to-noise ratio of 3. The relative standard deviation for migration time and peak area for iodide were 1.1 and 2.7%, respectively (n = 6). Iodide was eluted as an efficient peak, yielding a separation efficiency of 5.13 × 107 plates m-1. This focusing was reproducible for repeated analyses of seawater.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Advances in capillary electrochromatography and micro‐high performance liquid chromatography monolithic columns for separation scienceElectrophoresis, 2003
- Advances in sol‐gel based columns for capillary electrochromatography: Sol‐gel open‐tubular columnsElectrophoresis, 2002
- Towards a microchip-based chromatographic platform. Part 1: Evaluation of sol-gel phases for capillary electrochromatographyElectrophoresis, 2002
- On-Column Ion-Exchange Preconcentration of Inorganic Anions in Open Tubular Capillary Electrochromatography with Elution Using Transient-Isotachophoretic Gradients. 3. Implementation and Method DevelopmentAnalytical Chemistry, 2002
- Sol−Gel Monolithic Columns with Reversed Electroosmotic Flow for Capillary ElectrochromatographyAnalytical Chemistry, 2000
- Performance of a Monolithic Silica Column in a Capillary under Pressure-Driven and Electrodriven ConditionsAnalytical Chemistry, 2000
- Preparation and Characterization of Monolithic Porous Capillary Columns Loaded with Chromatographic ParticlesAnalytical Chemistry, 1998
- Octadecylsilylated Porous Silica Rods as Separation Media for Reversed-Phase Liquid ChromatographyAnalytical Chemistry, 1996
- Chemical properties of a low-oxygen water column in port hacking (Australia): Arsenic, iodine and nutrientsMarine Chemistry, 1990
- Iodine cycling in the Sargasso Sea and the Bermuda inshore watersMarine Chemistry, 1988