Determination of pharmaceutically related compounds by suppressed ion chromatography: I. Effects of organic solvent on suppressor performance

► First detailed study of the effects of organic solvents on the functionality of IC suppressors. ► Electrolytic suppressors give decreased suppression efficiency in the presence of methanol. ► The causes of this decreased performance are evaluated. ► Recommendations are provided for the best ways t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Chromatography A 2011-12, Vol.1218 (50), p.9037-9045
Hauptverfasser: Karu, Naama, Dicinoski, Greg W., Hanna-Brown, Melissa, Haddad, Paul R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► First detailed study of the effects of organic solvents on the functionality of IC suppressors. ► Electrolytic suppressors give decreased suppression efficiency in the presence of methanol. ► The causes of this decreased performance are evaluated. ► Recommendations are provided for the best ways to use suppressors. ► Investigation into universal detectors in IC of pharmaceutically related compounds. This overall study aims to investigate gradient elution ion-exchange chromatography of pharmaceutically relevant compounds using universal nebulisation detectors, such as evaporative light scattering detection (ELSD). Addition of organic solvents to the eluent is necessary to minimise hydrophobic adsorption on the polymeric stationary phase and improve solubility of analytes. It is also necessary to de-salt the eluent prior to detection, and in this work, ion chromatography suppressors were used for this step. Such suppressors have been designed for aqueous eluents, so the purpose of the present study was to investigate the effects of methanol and acetonitrile on suppressor performance. Chemical and electrolytic suppressors were evaluated for baseline drift, noise and efficiency of suppression using aqueous/organic eluents containing up to 40% (v/v) methanol or acetonitrile. Chemical suppression of aqueous/organic eluents showed minimal noise levels, uniform low baseline and low gradient drift. Electrolytic suppression gave good performance, but with higher baseline conductivity levels and baseline drift than chemical suppression. The elevated baseline was found not to be caused by incomplete suppression of the eluent, but was attributed to chemical reactions involving the organic solvents and facilitated by high electric currents and heat generation. It was demonstrated that suppressed ion-exchange separation using a complex KOH elution profile could be coupled with ELSD, with the suppressor effectively de-salting the eluent, producing a stable baseline. Finally, complementary separation selectivity was demonstrated using a set of pharmaceutically related organic acids separated by reversed-phase and ion-exchange methods.
ISSN:0021-9673
1873-3778
DOI:10.1016/j.chroma.2011.10.011