Hi Again, StephenO,
Isocratic, changes in RT are random amongst two HPLCs of the same type and from the same manufacturer (Waters Alliance), pH around 6 or so considering buffer + MeOH proportion in eluent,
30 deg Celsius.
Thinking about it a bit, the things that can affect retention time are, assuming the same column volume for two columns used remains the same, are:
Differences in the stationary phase in the two columns (not likely here).
Differences in the eluent (possible here, if each of two preps are used for each Alliance used even if the Same Eluent Additives are Used).
Differences in eluent temperature settings (probably not likely, but may be, or something like one HPLC could be under an AC/heating unit and the other not, but random retention time differences are hard to explain this way.).
Differences in eluent flow rate (probably not likely...as random differences in retention time are observed on both HPLCs...that said, are the backpressure values steady with pressure ripple less than 2% of mean value on each HPLC, are pressures within, say 100 or so PSI on both HPLCs, are IDs of capillary tubing the same on both HPLCs...are there leaks or air bubbles...random air bubbles may be most likely here, are you pre-mixing the ammonium acetate and the MeOH or using the pump and GPV to mix the two together on the HPLCs?).
Differences in the packing density of the stationary phase within the two columns (probably not likely).
My new set of thoughts:
Please check your pressure ripple values for both HPLCs when they are running...random air bubbles on both HPLCs is a possible explanation for what you observe.
Please ensure the ammonium acetate salts that you are using really are both similar through looking at their Certificates of Analysis...though this doesn't explain random retention time variation.
Please check into the pH adjustment of the ammonium acetate solution part of the eluent.
If it's easy for you, please check into the retention time of a non-retained substance (say uracil or sodium nitrate) on both systems with the two columns.
If your analyte(s) are neutral, there may be less of a chance for retention time shifting...unless the sample matrix itself is problematic. When I ran DNPH derivatives of carbonyl compounds on air samples from automotive exhaust, I found that I needed to increase the vendor-recommended ammonium acetate concentration from 4 mM to 12 mM to have stable retention times for all 15 analytes...standards were never a problem with retention time variablity...).
If your analyte(s) are polar, or even ionic, please check into their pKa values (as Tom noted above). In my opinion, the greatest likelihood of the randomly shifting retention times could be that the buffer may not be concentrated enough, or maybe that the eluent pH that you are working at is too close to the pKa of the analyte(s) you are trying to look at.
(That said, the other things I list may also contibute to the shifting retention times...though they are seemingly less likely at least to me.)
Best Wishes--and if Tom has further comments I'm sure he'll send them along.