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ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

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ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS. Precipitation. Gravimetry Precipitation Filtration Washing Drying or ignition Measuring Calculation. Separating species by distillation. Determination of ammonia Determination of carbon dioxide. Extraction. Distribution between organic and water phase. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS
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Page 1: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Page 2: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Precipitation

Gravimetry

•Precipitation•Filtration•Washing•Drying or ignition•Measuring•Calculation

Page 3: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Separating species by distillation

Determination of ammonia

Determination of carbon dioxide

Page 4: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Extraction

Distribution between organic and water phase

Separation of metal ions as chelates

Ions are: soluble in water insoluble in non polar-organic phase

O(C6H5 ) NH4

+

NO

O(C6H5 )3 Fe

NO

Cupferron: ionic ferric cupferrate: neutral

Separation of Fe3+ ion

Page 5: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Separating ions by ion exchangeCation exchange:xRSO3

-H+ + Mx+ (RSO3-)xMx+ + xH+

solid soln solid soln

Anion exchange:xRN(CH3)3

+OH- + Ax- [RN(CH3)3]xAx- + xOH-

solid soln solid soln

where: Mx represents a cation and R a part of resin containing sulfonic acid group

where: Ax- represents an anion and R a part of resin containing trimethyl ammonium group

After ion exchange cations or anions are on the resin, it should remove them

Page 6: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Chromatography

Page 7: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Mobile phase

Stationary phasesolid liqiud

Gas chromatographyGC

gas GSC GLC

Supercritical chromatography

SFC

Supercritical fluid

SFC SFC

Liquid chromatographyLC liquid

TLCIC

GPC,SEC

PC

Normal phase

(HPLC-NP)

Reversed phase

(HPLC-RP)

Liquid chromatographyLC

liquidCE

GEL ELFO

Classification of chromatographic methods

Page 8: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Frontal chromatography

Modes of chromatographic separation

Page 9: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Displacement chromatography

Page 10: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Elution chromatography

Page 11: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

1. Physical interactions-sorption: adsorption

absorption (solvation, distribution)chemisorption

-hydrofil-interactions

-hydrofob-interactions

-interactions based on size exclusion

2. Chemical interactions-acid-base interactions

-complex formation

-H-bond interactions

3. Biochemical interactions-biochemical affinity

Interactions in chromatography

Page 12: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Consequences:•Analytes are moving with different rates (differential migration)•In the course of chromatographic process band are wider and wider (band broadening)

The chromatographic process

Page 13: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Retention data

Retention time: tR

Dead time: tM (t0)

Reduced retention time: tR’ = tR - tM

Retention volume:

Reduced retention volume:

FtV RR

MRMRRR VVFttFtV

where: F, volumetric flow rate (cm3/min)

Page 14: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

The average linear rate of solute migration, (usually cm/s)

RtL

where L is the length of the column, tR retention time

RtLu

The average linear velocity of the mobile phase molecules, u

Page 15: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

The relationship between migration rate and distribution constant

The rate as a fraction of the velocity of mobile phase:

phasemobileinspendsoluteoftimeoffractionu

This fraction equals the average numbers of moles of solute in the mobile phase at any instant divided by the total number of moles of solute in the column:

solutesofmolestotalphasemobileinsoluteofmolesu

The total number of moles of solute in the mobile phase is :

nM = CM x VM

in stationary phase: nS = CS x VS

Page 16: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

MMSSSSMM

MM

VCVCu

VCVCVC

u/11

M

S

MA

SAC C

Caa

K

Therefore:

Since distribution constant:

therefore:

MSC VVKu

/11

Page 17: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

•Time spended of analyte in the stationary phase relating to the mobile phase

The retention factor: k’

k’: relative number of moles of analytes in the stationary and mobile phase

k’ = nS/nM

Page 18: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Other definition of retention factor for analyte A:

M

sAA VV

Kk

AKu

11

AMR ktL

tL

11

where: KA is the distribution constant for analyte A

Substitution to equation earliers:

Rearranging:

M

MRA t

ttk

Page 19: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Selectivity factor:

1

2

R

R

A

B

tt

kk

Always greater than 1.0

Page 20: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Column efficiency and band broadeningThe plate theory of chromatographyOne theoretical plate (N): the part of the column, where quasi-equilibrium takes place between stationary and mobile phase

2L

22

2t

R

σL

σtN

54,5162

wtN R

2

2/1

wtR

Where: standard deviation and 2

Variancew = 4

Page 21: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Gauss equation:

HETP: Height equivivalent to the theoretical plate (H)

NLH

Page 22: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

The rate theory of chromatography (van Deemter)

ApedC

Porous silica particleparticle size (diameter): dP

Theory of band broadening1. Eddy diffusion term (A) multiple path effects

Page 23: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

uB

uDC Md

2. The longitudal diffusion term (B/u)

Page 24: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

uCMM

2pM

DudC

uCSM

2pMS

DudC

3. Mobile phase mass transfer term (CM/u)

4. Stationary phase mass transfer term (CS/u)

Page 25: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

uCuu

A S MCBH

H

u

The van Deemter equation of chromatography

The equation has an optimum (Hopt) where the column efficiency is highest.This optimum has been found at a linear velocity: for gas chromatography at. 0.1 – 0.5 cm/sfor liquid chromatography at: 1.0 – 5.0 cm/s

Page 26: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

At high linear velocities equation can be estimated as:

uCu

A SBH

Page 27: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

)(21

21

12

ww

ttR RRs

Resolution

'k1'k

α1αN

41R

2

22S

Resolution expressed with the terms of plate number, selectivity and retention factors

Page 28: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

'k1'k

α1αN

41R

2

22S

Methods to increase resolution

Page 29: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

'k1'k

α1αN

41R

2

22S

Effect of increase of retention factor on resolution

How to increase retention factor:•By decreasing eluent strength

Page 30: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

Effect of increase of separation factor on resolution

'k1'k

α1αN

41R

2

22S

How to increase separation factor:•By change chemical quality of the mobile phase•By change quality of column

Page 31: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

'k1'k

α1αN

41R

2

22S

Effect of increase of plate number on resolution

How to increase theoretical plate number:•Decrease of the flow rate (u)•Increase of the column length (L)

Page 32: ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS

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