Laterally attached liquid crystalline polymers as stationary phases in reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography: V. Study of retention mechanism using linear solvation energy relationships

A linear solvation energy relationship model was used to characterize the retention behavior of a stationary phase based upon a nematic side-on liquid crystalline polymer (SOLCP) in reversed-phase liquid chromatography. The set of solutes was constituted of a high variety of compounds whose molecula...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Chromatography A 2001-07, Vol.922 (1), p.51-61
Hauptverfasser: Gritti, F, Félix, G, Achard, M.F, Hardouin, F
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Félix, G
Achard, M.F
Hardouin, F
description A linear solvation energy relationship model was used to characterize the retention behavior of a stationary phase based upon a nematic side-on liquid crystalline polymer (SOLCP) in reversed-phase liquid chromatography. The set of solutes was constituted of a high variety of compounds whose molecular sizes were considerably smaller than the mesogenic unit size. The results showed good statistical fits for these retention data in 65:35, 75:25 and 85:15 (v/v) methanol–water mobile phases. Both the cavity term and excess molar refraction are the most important favorable retention-governing parameters, whereas the solute hydrogen bond acceptor basicity is the most unfavorable retention parameter. Hydrophobicity and π–π interactions decrease strongly when the percentage of methanol increases, leading to an important retention decrease despite the fact that the hydrogen bond interaction weakens as the organic solvent is added. The shape recognition ability of this side-on liquid crystalline stationary phase on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon solutes is partly explained by the solutes’ high polarizability due to the presence of π-electrons. However, the solute polarizability is not sufficient and a stationary phase’s “structure effect” must to be taken into account for the shape discrimination observed. The strong interaction between liquid crystal molecules caused likely a adsorption retention mechanism rather than a partition mechanism.
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subjects Analytical chemistry
Chemistry
Chromatographic methods and physical methods associated with chromatography
Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - instrumentation
Crystallization
Exact sciences and technology
Hydrogen Bonding
Liquid crystalline polymers
Other chromatographic methods
Polymers - chemistry
Solvents - chemistry
title Laterally attached liquid crystalline polymers as stationary phases in reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography: V. Study of retention mechanism using linear solvation energy relationships
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