Monolithic Stationary Phases for Capillary Electrochromatography Based on Synthetic Polymers: Designs and Applications — František Švec (2000) | RDL Network
Monolithic Stationary Phases for Capillary Electrochromatography Based on Synthetic Polymers: Designs and Applications
Article 2000 en
Authors
FŠ
František Švec
EP
Eric C. Peters
DS
David Sýkora
Abstract
1 min read
Monolithic materials have quickly become a well-established stationary phase format in the field of capillary electrochromatography (CEC). Both the simplicity of their in situ preparation method and the large variety of readily available chemistries make the monolithic separation media an attractive alternative to capillary columns packed with particulate materials. This review summarizes the contributions of numerous groups working in this rapidly growing area, with a focus on monolithic capillary columns prepared from synthetic polymers. Various approaches employed for the preparation of the monoliths are detailed, and where available, the material properties of the resulting monolithic capillary columns are shown. Their chromatographic performance is demonstrated by numerous separations of different analyte mixtures in variety of modes. Although detailed studies of the effect of polymer properties on the analytical performance of monolithic capillaries remain scarce at this early stage of their development, this review also discusses some important relationships such as the effect of pore size on the separation performance in more detail.
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