Your compounds are drastically different in hydrophobicity and have some difference in pKa value. The development of the method, even gradient, might be quite challenging, because pseudoephedrine is not retained well on RP column. We recently develop a method for a different mixture which contains compounds with similar properties-NyQuil (Tylenol) caught medication. These compositions contain ephedrine, chlorpheniramine and dextromethorphan. Dextromethorphan is much more hydrophobic then ephedrine. Check the following link:
http://allsep.com/makeCmp.php?cmp=Cmp_118
As you can see from the link all compounds are eluted in reasonable time on Primesep column, while traditional RP gives a big gap between ephedrine (C10H15NO) and dextromethorphan (C18H25NO). You might need to go to higher organic concentration (70%) to elute fexofenadine. On Primesep C column you ephedrine will retain by ion-exchange mechanism while fexofenadine will retain mostly by reverse phase mechanism By paying with pH, buffer concentration and amount of the acetonitrile you have a good chance to elute these compounds in a reasonable time. You can also effectively play with pH of the mobile phase to gradually shut down ion-exchange properties of Primesep C column thus reducing ion-exchange interaction between stationary phase and fexofenadine.
What are you objectives for this separation (detection technique, run time, solvent and buffers of choice)?
If you can provide us with the sample of fexofenadine we will develop a method for you.
Contact us if you have questions.
Regards,