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Column Chromatography

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Column chromatography



 
 
Column chromatography in chemistry
Chemistry

Chemistry is the science concerned with the composition, structure, and properties of matter, as well as the changes it undergoes during chemical reactions....
 is a method used to purify individual chemical compounds from mixtures of compounds. It is often used for preparative applications on scales from micrograms up to kilograms.

The classical preparative chromatography column is a glass tube with a diameter from 5 to 50 mm and a height of 50 cm to 1 m with a tap at the bottom.






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Column chromatography in chemistry
Chemistry

Chemistry is the science concerned with the composition, structure, and properties of matter, as well as the changes it undergoes during chemical reactions....
 is a method used to purify individual chemical compounds from mixtures of compounds. It is often used for preparative applications on scales from micrograms up to kilograms.

The classical preparative chromatography column is a glass tube with a diameter from 5 to 50 mm and a height of 50 cm to 1 m with a tap at the bottom. A slurry
Slurry

A slurry is, in general, a thick suspension of solids in a liquid and may be:* A mixture of water and cement to form concrete* A mixture of water, thickening agent#weapon use, and oxidizers used as an water gel...
 is prepared of the eluent with the stationary phase
Chromatography

Chromatography is the collective term for a family of laboratory techniques for the separation of mixtures. It involves passing a mixture dissolved in a "mobile phase" through a stationary phase, which separates the analyte to be measured from other molecules in the mixture and allows it to be isolated....
 powder and then carefully poured into the column. Care must be taken to avoid air bubbles. A solution of the organic material is pipetted on top of the stationary phase. This layer is usually topped with a small layer of sand or with cotton or glass wool to protect the shape of the organic layer from the velocity of newly added eluant. Eluant is slowly passed through the column to advance the organic material. Often a spherical eluent reservoir or an eluent-filled and stoppered separating funnel is put on top of the column.

The individual components are retained by the stationary phase differently and separate from each other while they are running at different speeds through the column with the eluant. At the end of the column they elute one at a time. During the entire chromatography process the eluant is collected in a series of fraction
Fractionation

Fractionation is a separation process in which a certain quantity of a mixture is divided up in a number of smaller quantities in which the wikt:composition changes according to a gradient....
s. The composition of the eluant flow can be monitored and each fraction is analyzed for dissolved compounds, e.g. by analytical chromatography, UV
Ultraviolet

Ultraviolet light is electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength shorter than that of visible light, but longer than x-rays, in the range 400 nanometer to 10 nm, and energies from 3 Electron volt to 124 eV....
 absorption, or fluorescence
Fluorescence

Fluorescence is a luminescence that is mostly found as an optical phenomenon in cold bodies, in which the molecular absorption of a photon triggers the emission of a photon with a longer wavelength....
. Colored compounds (or fluorescent
Fluorescence

Fluorescence is a luminescence that is mostly found as an optical phenomenon in cold bodies, in which the molecular absorption of a photon triggers the emission of a photon with a longer wavelength....
 compounds with the aid of an UV
Ultraviolet

Ultraviolet light is electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength shorter than that of visible light, but longer than x-rays, in the range 400 nanometer to 10 nm, and energies from 3 Electron volt to 124 eV....
 lamp) can be seen through the glass wall as moving bands.

Overview


Stationary phase (adsorbent)


The stationary phase or adsorbent in column chromatography is a solid. The most common stationary phase for column chromatography is silica gel
Silica gel

Silica gel is a granularity, vitreous, highly porosity form of silica made synthetically from sodium silicate. Despite its name, silica gel is a solid....
, followed by alumina
Aluminium oxide

Aluminium oxide is an amphoteric oxide of aluminium with the chemical formula 23. It is also commonly referred to as alumina or aloxite in the mining, ceramic and materials science communities....
. Cellulose
Cellulose

File:Cellulose Sessel.svgCellulose is an organic compound with the chemical formula , a polysaccharide consisting of a linear chain of several hundred to over ten thousand ? linked D-glucose units....
 powder has often been used in the past. Also possible are ion exchange chromatography
Ion exchange chromatography

Ion-exchange chromatography is a process that allows the separation of ions and polar molecules based on the charge properties of the molecules....
, reversed-phase chromatography
Reversed-phase chromatography

Reversed-phase chromatography includes any chromatographic method that uses a non-polar Stationary phase . The name "reversed phase" has a historical background....
 (RP), affinity chromatography
Affinity chromatography

Affinity chromatography is a chromatography method of separating biochemistry mixtures, based on a highly specific biologic interaction such as that between antigen and antibody, enzyme and Substrate , or Receptor and Ligand ....
 or expanded bed adsorption
Expanded bed adsorption

Expanded bed adsorption is a preparative chromatographic technique which makes processing of viscous and particulate liquids possible. Where classical column chromatography uses a solid phase made by a packed bed, EBA uses a fluidization bed....
 (EBA). The stationary phases are usually finely ground powders or gels and/or are microporous for an increased surface, though in EBA a fluidized bed is used.

Mobile phase (eluent)


The mobile phase or eluent is either a pure solvent
Solvent

A solvent is a liquid or gas that dissolves a solid, liquid, or gaseous solute, resulting in a solution.The most common solvent in everyday life is water....
 or a mixture of different solvents. It is chosen so that the retention factor value of the compound of interest is roughly around 0.75 in order to minimize the time and the amount of eluent to run the chromatography. The eluent has also been chosen so that the different compounds can be separated effectively. The eluent is optimized in small scale pretests, often using thin layer chromatography
Chromatography

Chromatography is the collective term for a family of laboratory techniques for the separation of mixtures. It involves passing a mixture dissolved in a "mobile phase" through a stationary phase, which separates the analyte to be measured from other molecules in the mixture and allows it to be isolated....
 (TLC) with the same stationary phase.

A faster flow rate of the eluent minimizes the time required to run a column and thereby minimizes diffusion, resulting in a better separation, see Van Deemter's equation
Van Deemter's equation

The Van Deemter equation in chromatography relates the variance per unit length of a separation column to the linear mobile phase velocity by considering physical, kinetic, and thermodynamic properties of a separation....
. A simple laboratory column runs by gravity flow. The flow rate of such a column can be increased by extending the fresh eluent filled column above the top of the stationary phase or decreased by the tap controls. Better flow rates can be achieved by using a pump or by using compressed gas (e.g. air, nitrogen
Nitrogen

Nitrogen is a chemical element that has the symbol N and atomic number 7 and atomic mass 14.00674?. Elemental nitrogen is a colorless, odorless, tasteless and mostly inert diatomic gas at standard conditions, constituting 78% by volume of Earth's atmosphere....
, or argon
Argon

Argon is a chemical element designated by the symbol Ar. Argon has atomic number 18 and is the third element in group 18 of the periodic table ....
) to push the solvent through the column (flash column chromatography).

A spreadsheet that assists in the successful development of flash columns has been developed. The spreadsheet estimates the retention volume and band volume of analytes, the fraction numbers expected to contain each analyte, and the resolution between adjacent peaks. This information allows users to select optimal parameters for preparative-scale separations before the flash column itself is attempted.

Automated Systems


Column chromatography is an extremely time consuming stage in any lab and can quickly become the bottle neck for any process lab. Therefore, several manufactures have developed automated flash chromatography systems (typically referred to as LPLC, low pressure liquid chromatography, around 50-75 psi) that minimize human involvement in the purification process. Automated systems will include components normally found on more expensive HPLC systems such as a gradient pump, sample injection ports, a UV detector and a fraction collector to collect the eluent. Typically these automated systems can separate samples from a few milligrams up to an industrial kg scale and offer a much cheaper and quicker solution to doing multiple injections on prep-HPLC systems.

The resolution (or the ability to separate a mixture) on an LPLC system will always be lower compared to HPLC, as the packing material in an HPLC column can be much smaller, typically only 5 micrometre thus increasing stationary phase surface area, increasing surface interactions and giving better separation. However, the use of this small packing media causes the high back pressure and is why it is termed high pressure liquid chromatography. The LPLC columns are typically packed with silica of around 50 micrometres, thus reducing back pressure and resolution, but it also removes the need for expensive high pressure pumps. Manufactures are now starting to move into higher pressure flash chromatography systems and have termed these as medium pressure liquid chromatography (MPLC) systems which operate above 150 psi.

The software controlling an automated system will coordinate the components, allow a user to only collect the factions that contain their target compound (assuming they are detectable on the systems detector) and help the user to find the resulting purified material within the fraction collector. The software will also save the resulting chromatograph from the process for archival and/or later recall purposes.

A representative example of column chromatography as part of an undergraduate laboratory exercise is the separation of three components (out of 28) in the oil of spearmint
Spearmint

Mentha spicata is a species of Mentha native to much of Europe and southwest Asia, though its exact natural range is uncertain due to extensive early cultivation....
: carvone
Carvone

Carvone is a member of a family of chemicals called terpene. Carvone is found naturally in many essential oils, but is most abundant in the oils from seeds of caraway and dill....
, limonene
Limonene

Limonene is a hydrocarbon, classified as a cyclic terpene. It is a colourless liquid at room temperatures with an extremely strong smell of Orange ....
 and dehydrocarveol . A microscale
Microscale chemistry

Microscale Chemistry is a teaching method widely used at school and at university levels, working with small quantities of chemical substances....
 setup consisting of a Pasteur pipette
Pasteur pipette

Pasteur pipettes, also known as droppers or eye droppers, are used to transfer small quantities of liquids. They are usually glass tubes tapered to a narrow point, and fitted with a rubber bulb at the top....
 as column with silica gel stationary phase can suffice. The starting eluent is hexane
Hexane

Hexane is an alkane hydrocarbon with the chemical formula CH34CH3 or C6H14. The "hex" prefix refers to its six carbons, while the "ane" ending indicates that its carbons are connected by single bonds....
 and solvent polarity
Polarity

In physics, polarity is a description of an attribute, typically a binary attribute , or a vector . For example:* An electric charge has a polarity of either positive or negative....
 is increased during the process by adding ethyl acetate
Ethyl acetate

Ethyl acetate is the organic compound with the formula CH3COOCH2CH3. This colorless liquid has a characteristic sweet smell like certain glues or nail polish removers, in which it is used....
. Dr. bhakti

Column Chromatogram Resolution Calculation


Typically, column chromatography is set up with peristaltic pumps flowing buffers and the solution sample through the top of the column. The solutions and buffers pass through the column where a fraction collector at the end of the column setup collects the eluted samples from the it. Prior to the fraction collection, the samples that are eluted from the column pass through a detector such as a spectrophotometer or mass spectrometer so that the concentration of the separated samples in the sample solution mixture can be determined.

For example, if you were to separate two different proteins with different binding capacities to the column from a solution sample, a good type of detector would be a spectrophotometer using a wavelength of 280 nm. The higher the concentration of protein that passes through the eluted solution through the column, the higher the absorbance of that wavelength.
Because the column chromatography has a constant flow of eluted solution passing through the detector at varying concentrations, the detector must plot the concentration of the eluted sample over a course of time. This plot of sample concentration versus time is called a chromatogram.

The ultimate goal of chromatography is to separate different components from a solution mixture. The resolution expresses the extent of separation between the components from the mixture. The higher the resolution of the chromatogram, the better the extent of separation of the samples the column gives. This data is a good way of determining the column’s separation properties of that particular sample. The resolution can be calculated from the chromatogram.
The separate curves in the diagram represent different sample elution concentration profiles over time based on their affinity to the column resin. To calculate resolution, the retention time and curve width are required.

Retention Time: The time from the start of signal detection by the detector to the peak height of the elution concentration profile of each different sample.

Curve Width: The width of the concentration profile curve of the different samples in the chromatogram in units of time.

A simplified method of calculating chromatogram resolution is to use the plate model. The plate model assumes that the column can be divided into a certain number of sections, or plates and the mass balance can be calculated for each individual plate. This approach approximates a typical chromatogram curve as a Gaussian distribution curve. By doing this, the curve width is estimated as 4 times the standard deviation of the curve, 4s. The retention time is the time from the start of signal detection to the time of the peak height of the Gaussian curve.

From the variables in the figure above, the resolution, plate number, and plate height of the column plate model can be calculated using the equations:

Resolution (Rs):
Rs = 2(tRB – tRA)/(wB + wA)
Where:
tRB = retention time of solute B
tRA = retention time of solute A
wB = Gaussian curve width of solute B
wA = Gaussian curve width of solute A
Plate Number (N):
N = (tR2)/(w/4)2
Plate Height (H):
H = L/N
Where L is the length of the column.

Column Adsorption Equilibrium


For an adsorption column, the column resin (the stationary phase) is composed of microbeads. Even smaller particles such as proteins, carbohydrates, metal ions, or other chemical compounds are conjugated onto the microbeads. Each binding particle that is attached to the microbead can be assumed to bind in a 1:1 ratio with the solute sample sent through the column that needs to be purified or separated.



Binding between the target molecule to be separated and the binding molecule on the column beads can be modeled using a simple equilibrium reaction Keq = [CS]/([C][S]) where Keq is the equilibrium constant
Equilibrium constant

For a general chemical equilibriumthe equilibrium constant can be defined bywhere is the activity of the chemical species A etc . It is conventional to put the activities of the products in the numerator and those of the reactants in the denominator....
, [C] and [S] are the concentrations of the target molecule and the binding molecule on the column resin, respectively. [CS] is the concentration of the complex of the target molecule bound to the column resin.

Using this as a basis, three different isotherms can be used to describe the binding dynamics of a column chromatography: linear, Langmuir, and Freundlich.



The linear isotherm occurs when the solute concentration needed to be purified is very small relative to the binding molecule of the. Thus, the equilibrium can be defined as:
[CS] = Keq[C].



For industrial scale uses, the total binding molecules on the column resin beads must be factored in because unoccupied sites must be taken into account. The Langmuir isotherm and Freundlich isotherm are useful in describing this equilibrium. Langmuir Isotherm:
[CS] = (KeqStot[C])/(1 + Keq[C]), where Stot is the total binding molecules on the beads.

Freundlich Isotherm:
[CS] = Keq[C]1/n

The Freundlich isotherm is used when the column can bind to many different samples in the solution that needs to be purified. Because the many different samples have different binding constants to the beads, there are many different Keq’s. Therefore, the Langmuir isotherm is not a good model for binding in this case.

See also


  • Chromatography
    Chromatography

    Chromatography is the collective term for a family of laboratory techniques for the separation of mixtures. It involves passing a mixture dissolved in a "mobile phase" through a stationary phase, which separates the analyte to be measured from other molecules in the mixture and allows it to be isolated....
    , an overview article covering all chromatographic techniques.
  • High performance liquid chromatography
    High performance liquid chromatography

    High-performance liquid chromatography is a form of column chromatography used frequently in biochemistry and analytical chemistry to separate, identify, and quantify compounds....
     (HPLC) for column chromatography using high pressure.
  • Fast protein liquid chromatography
    Fast protein liquid chromatography

    Fast protein liquid chromatography , is a form of liquid chromatography similar to high-performance liquid chromatography that is used to separate or purify proteins from complex mixtures....
     (FPLC) for separation of proteins using column chromatography.


Suppliers of Chromatography columns and accessories

  • Agilent Technologies
  • American Polymer Standards Corporation
  • AkzoNobel
  • Beckman Coulter, Inc.
  • Merck KGaA
    Merck KGaA

    Merck KGaA is a Germany-based Chemical industry and pharmaceutical company. Merck was founded in Darmstadt, Germany, in 1668 and is one of the oldest still-operating chemical/pharmaceutical companies in the world....
  • Phenomenex
    Phenomenex

    Phenomenex, Inc. is a consumables company currently based in Torrance, California, California, USA. Phenomenex is dedicated to manufacture High performance liquid chromatography, Gas-liquid chromatography and Solid phase extraction columns, as well as other consumables applying to column chromatography techniques....
  • Presearch
    Presearch

    Presearch was founded in 1991 with the aim of providing elegant solutions to emerging issues in HPLC and related techniques. Presearch is now the distributor for over 21 scientific manufacturers....
  • Shimadzu Scientific Instruments
  • Sigma-Aldrich
    Sigma-Aldrich

    Sigma-Aldrich Corporation , headquartered in St. Louis, Missouri, is a supplier of reagents and materials for use in research and development, diagnostics and analysis....
  • Thermo Fisher Scientific
    Thermo Fisher Scientific

    Thermo Fisher Scientific is a large life sciences supply company that was created in 2006 by the merger of Thermo Electron and Fisher Scientific....
  • Tosoh Corporation
  • Varian, Inc.
    Varian, Inc.

    Varian, Inc. is one of the largest manufacturers of scientific instruments for the scientific industry; they have offerings over the whole range of chemical analysis equipment, with a particular focus on Information Rich Detection and Vacuum technology....
  • Waters Corporation
    Waters Corporation

    Waters Corporation is a publicly traded laboratory analytical instrument and software company headquartered in Milford, Massachusetts. The company employs more than 5,000 people, with manufacturing facilities located in Milford, Taunton, Massachusetts; Wexford, Ireland; Manchester, England; and contract manufacturing in Singapore....
  • Biotage AB
  • W. R. Grace and Company
    W. R. Grace and Company

    W. R. Grace and Company is a Columbia, Maryland, United States based chemical Conglomerate .The company has two main divisions, Davison Chemicals and Performance Chemicals....
  • Bio-Chem Fluidics


External links

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