HPLC- Lite
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Transcript of HPLC- Lite
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HPLC: High Performance Liquid Chromatography.Principles, instrumentation & application
Presenter: Dr Pranav SoporyDepartment of Pharmacology
All India Institute of Medical SciencesNew Delhi
Mob: 9999-491-690email: [email protected]
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Chromatography
• Chromatography is a separation & identification technique
• Technique: Differences in the rate at which the component(s) of a mixture
move through:
1. A porous medium (stationary phase)
2. under the influence of a solvent (mobile phase).
Liquid Chromatography
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Basic Instrumentation
PumpInjector
Column
Stationary Phase
Detector
Mobile Phase
Data Processing
• Process: movement of the compounds via the apparatus.
- Which travel along mobile phase across an immobile surface (stationary phase). –
Affinity of compound of our interest with the stationary phase based on certain chemical
properties.
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Electronegativity
• Electronegativity is a measure of the tendency of an atom to attract a
bonding pair of electrons.
• Depending on difference in electronegativity between two atoms:
0.4 – 1.7 < 0.4Polar bonds Non-polar bonds
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Polarity
Polar compounds:
• positive charge on one side • negative charge on the other• The dipoles do not cancel out
resulting in a net dipole• Since H2O is polar, these
molecules are HYDROPHILIC
Non-Polar compounds:
• The dipoles cancel out resulting in a net dipole• Non-polar compounds are:• Soluble in non-polar solvents
such as Heptane & Hexane• HYDROPHOBIC
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Mobile Phase
• Classifying phase for different types of Chromatography
1. Gas Chromatography: carrier is gas (He and N2)
2. Liquid Chromatography: carrier is liquid
• Carrier: Liquid solvent carrying all the substances we want to separate
and/or identify
• Carrier is also known as a vehicle
• The compound we want to separate/identify should dissolve in that liquid
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Stationary Phase
• Immobile surface that is particulate in nature
• This surface tests the samples affinity
• Effect of Stationary Phase: C18 is a Non-polar S.P. gradient
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Q. Why do polar molecules attract each other?
Q. Why do non-polar molecules attract each other?
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Example via Normal Phase HPLC mechanism
POLAR:Stronger interaction
NONPOLARWeaker interaction
Mobile Phase
Stationary Phase (POLAR)
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• Polar compounds travel slower & are eluted slowly due to higher affinity to St. phase
• Non-polar compounds travels faster & are eluted first due to lower affinity to St. phase.
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SeparationInjector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Mixer
Pumps
High Performance Liquid Chromatograph
Waste
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Mixer
Pumps
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
High Performance Liquid Chromatograph
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Mixer
Pumps
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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Injector
Detector
Column
Solvents
Pumps
Mixer
Chromatogram
Start Injection
mAU
time
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The Chromatogram
Injection
mAU
time
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HPLC: Qualitative Analysis
Injection
to
tR
mAU
time
tR to - elution time of non-retained substance (aka “dead time”/ “baseline disturbance”)
tR- retention time - determines sample identity
The aim of qualitative analysis is to answer the question ‘What’ is in the sample?
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HPLC: Qualitative Analysis
1. Retention Time (tR)
• Time taken for a solute to pass through a chromatography column.
• tR is specific to a compound, but not absolute.
• Factors influencing different tR for the same compound:
1. The gas flow rate
2. Temperature differences
3. Column degradation
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tR
tR
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HPLC: Quantitative Analysis• Determine concentration.
There are two main ways to interpret a chromatogram to perform quantification.
1. Determination of the peak height of a chromatogram
2. Determination of the “Area under Peak”
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HPLC: Quantitative Analysis• Determination of Area under peak Requirements of good quantification
Good resolution
Good peak performance
Compound already quantified
Result
Use standard reference data
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Solvent Tray
Solvent Reservoir
Controller Unit
Degasser
Quaternery Pump
Autosampler with chiller unit
PDA Detector
Fluorescence detector
Column
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Pump (Solvent Delivery System)
• The role of the pump is to force a liquid (called the mobile phase) through the LC system to achieve the DESIRED FLOW RATE
• During the chromatographic experiment, a pump can deliver:
Flow Rate 1-2 mL/minPump Pressure 500 bar (1 bar = 760mmHg)
Premixed Mobile Phase 1 pump & 1 valve Isocratic Pump
2 Solvents 2 pumps & 2 valves Binary pump
4 Solvents 1 pump & 4 valves Quaternary Pump
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PumpInjector
Column
Stationary Phase
Detector
Mobile Phase
Data Processing
InjectorColumn
Stationary Phase
Detector
Isocratic Pump
Binary Pump
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Running the application
Measure Mobile Phase composition
Type
Single compound Constant polarity Isocratic Run
Multiple compounds Increasing polarity Gradient Run
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Automatic Injector
Introduces the liquid sample into the flow stream of the mobile phase.
Typical sample volumes: 20 μL.
Mechanism:
1. User loads vials containing the sample into the auto sampler tray (80 samples)
2. The auto sampler automatically
a. measures the appropriate sample volume
b. injects the sample
c. then flushes the injector to be ready for the next sample
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Basic Instrumentation
PumpInjector
Column
Stationary Phase
Detector
Mobile Phase
Data Processing
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Column: Heart of the chromatograph
• Column’s stationary phase separates the sample components
of interest using various chemical parameters.
Column Types
Normal Phase HPLC
Reverse Phase HPLC
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Classification of HPLC
Normal Phase HPLC Reverse Phase HPLC
Stationary Phase Polar (H’philic)SiO2, Al2O3
Non-polar (H’phobic)H’phobic polymer: S18
Mobile Phase Non-polar (H’phobic)Heptane, Hexane,
Cyclohexane
Polar (H’philic)Water, Methanol, Buffers
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Normal Phase HPLC (Traditional)
• Stationary Phase – Polar nature.
Eg: SiO2, Al2O3
• Mobile Phase – Non-polar nature.
Eg: Heptane, hexane and cyclohexane.
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Normal Phase HPLC Mechanism:
• Polar compounds travel slower & are eluted slowly due to higher affinity to
stationary phase.
• Non-polar compounds travels faster & are eluted earlier due to lower affinity to
stationary phase.
POLAR:Stronger interaction
NONPOLARWeaker interaction
Mobile Phase
Stationary Phase (POLAR)
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Reverse Phase HPLC• Stationary Phase – Non-polar nature.
Eg: H’phobic polymers: Silica(C18)
• Mobile Phase – Polar nature.
Eg: methanol-water or acetonitrile-water
Mechanism:
• Non-polar compounds travel slower & are eluted slowly due to higher affinity to
stationary phase.
• Polar compounds travels faster & are eluted earlier due to lower affinity to stationary
phase.
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Rule:
NP-HPLC: Components elute in increasing order of polarity.
RP-HPLC: Components elute in decreasing order of polarity. (Reverse!)
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Advantages of RP-HPLC
• Polar (H’philic) mobile phase:
1. Easier to modify
2. Therefore, more permutation and combination possible
3. Larger number of compounds can be identified
• NP-HPLC: H’phobic mobile phase:
1. Decreased flow rate & increased retention time.
2. To modify polarity: Column must be changed !
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Degassing of solvents• When high pressure is pumped, the risk of formation of gas bubbles increases
which interferes with the separation process.
• Hence de-gassing is very important and it can be done by various ways:
1. Vacuum filtration:
De-gassing is accomplished by applying a vacuum to the solvent container.
2. Ultrasonication:
Done by using ultrasonicator which converts ultrasonic high frequency to
mechanical vibrations.
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Detectors in our Lab
Types:
1) UV-Visual Detector
1) Photo Diode Array Detector
2) Fluorescence Detector
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UV-Vis Detector
• Principles: Measures absorbance via Beer Lambert’s law
IiIt
Column
Transmitted Light (It)Absorbance: - Log (T)
Transmittance (T): Incident Light (Ii)
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UV-Vis Detector
Characteristics: Specific, Concentration, good stability,
gradient capability.
Has to be set to a desired wavelength
Detects between 190-800 nm
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Photo Diode Array Detectors• Provision to scan the entire wavelength spectrum.
• Detects from 190-800nm.
• The resulting spectra is a 3D plot of Response Vs Time Vs Wavelength.
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3D Data
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Fluorescence DetectorIt is based on the fluorescent radiation emitted by some compounds.Advantage and disadvantage• Highly selective because relatively few compounds emit fluorescence
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What is HPLC used for?
• HPLC : separation/identification of compounds that are non-volatile .
• (Volatility: easily evaporated at normal temperatures)
• NOTE: If a compound is volatile (e.g. hydrocarbon in gasoline, etc.), then gas
chromatography is a better separation technique .
• Typical non-volatile compounds are:
1. Pharmaceuticals: like aspirin, MTX and Phenytoin
2. Biochemical: Proteins, amines, glycated hemoglobin
3. Salt: like sodium chloride and potassium phosphate
4. Natural Products: Ginseng.
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In our Lab• Shimadzu HPLC system.• Chem-station software
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Uses:
Anti-Epileptic drugs Phenytoin, Phenobarbitone, Carbamazepine, Sodium Valproate
Anti-Hypertensive drugs Amlodopine, Prazocine, Metoprolol, Clonidine
Anti-Tubercular Drugs Rifampicin, Ethambutol, Pyrazinamide, Isoniazid
Anti-diabetic drugs Glibenclamide, Metformin
Other Drugs Methotrexate, Mycophenolic acid, Amphoteracin-B
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References:
• Introduction to HPLC – Agilent Technologies
• Dr Cristina Legido-Quigley, Lecturer in Pharmaceutical Chemistry at L1 - KCL, 6th
October 2008
• HPLC THEORY INTRODUCTION AND INSTRUMENTATION HARDWARE
• http://elchem.kaist.ac.kr/vt/chem-ed/sep/lc/hplc.htm
• http://www.chemistry.nmsu.edu/Instrumentation/Lqd_Chroma.html
• CHROMACADEMY: CRAWFORD SCIENTIFIC
• Skoog, Holler, and Neiman. Principles of Instrumental Analysis. 5th ed. Orlando:
Harcourt Brace & Co., 1998.
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Types of Chromatography
Type Separates Mobile Phase Stationary Phase
Liquid Liquid samples Liquid Solvent Solid beads
Gas Vaporized samples Carrier Gas Solid beads
Paper Dried Liquid samples Liquid Solvent Paper Strip
Thin-layer Dried liquid samples Liquid Solvent Thin layer of Aluminia or Silica gel
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Thank You