by
XL » Tue Jun 07, 2011 7:20 am
While Benzalkonium Chloride, a cationic surfactant, contains C12, C14 and C16 homologues, polysorbate 80 (or Tween 20), a nonionic surfactant, is a complex mixture of many components with various capacity. Thus analysis of one in the presence of the other can be challenging. In addition, obtaining good peak shapes of cationic surfactants on a silica based column can be difficult, especially when a MS-compatible mobile phase is desired.
One strategy is to remove polysorbate first by trapping the cationic surfactant on the cation-exchange SPE material (on-line or off-line). Then elute the cationic surfactant out by pH and/or ionic strength onto an analytical column under suitable conditions.
Another strategy is to use an application-specific column - Dionex Acclaim Surfactant (Thermo Scientific) and surpressed conductivity detection using acetic acid aq. solution and acetonitrile as the mobile phase. There are several benefits. First, conductivity detection selectively "see" charged analytes without any interferences from neutral analytes such as polysorbate 80. Thus, sample preparation requires nothing except simply filter and inject. Second, the Acclaim Surfactant column provides ideal selectivity and good peak shape for cationic surfactants. Third, the mobile phase is MS compatible.
Attached link gives more details of the Acclaim Surfactant column:
http://www.dionex.com/en-us/webdocs/258 ... et_V24.pdf. Please pay attention to Figure 9. If you have any questions, feel free to contact me at
xiaodong.liu@thermofisher.com.
Good luck.