Dr. Neue, if I could answer your question, I would. However, I do like being agreeable.

And, if I ever can help you understand something, then there has been a significant glitch in the Matrix. Or you've taken up water polo, in which case I would be Yoda to your Luke.
I know this much - my first attempt to run nitroguanidine (hereafter abbreviated NQ, per convention) at 0.2 ppm in 90:10 ACN:H2O (initial MP conditions) was unsuccessful. I saw no peak, but I did have a larger 'solvent front' (?) peak than in my blank at about 0.65 minutes (which, for a 4.6x50mm at 1 mL/min seems to me to be before the void volume of the column), and I saw no peaks at all running at the gradient I specified earlier. I had to shelve the analysis after this run, as time constraints presented themselves (there is always tomorrow, though

).
I did read somewhere that NQ has a pkA of 2.53, and from your HPLC Troubleshooting Guide, operating near the pkA of the analyte in question can be problematic. Since this is a diol-based HILIC column (rather than bare silica), and I have had no luck (in my one injection so far) running neutral HILIC on this analyte, should I try to run this analyte using a buffered mobile phase? If so, what pH/buffer should I try?
Also, I had to explain to my boss that it wasn't the size of the column in the separation, but the retention factor. I don't think she bought my explanation for why the column was so small....