by
Victor » Fri Oct 22, 2004 12:27 pm
Richard,
Neither myself, or apparently HWM can understand the details of your argument. This is a pity, because there may be something important here.
If you are testing the high pH stability of a column, you need to take a standard of a few test compounds in mobile phase (no other matrix) and inject it, say once a day until the column no longer gives good performance. You must not inject anything else. The number of sample injections is going to be small. No "real" samples are injected in this investigation. You then should have a result as to how long (in terms of volume of mobile phase or perhaps in terms of time of contact with the mobile phase), that the column is stable. If a column lasts 2 days then the answer is clearly that it is not stable to high pH mobile phase-you needn't perform any other experiments with it. Repeat with the second column. I begin to think you have not performed such experiments.
If the results of the above experiment are reasonable, say each column lasts some weeks, then you can proceed with another test to see how many samples (real samples, plasma extracts or whatever) you can inject before the column is of no use to you. It would be useful to also perform such an experiment at a mobile phase pH where the column was much more stable. It might tell you whether one column is more susceptible to matrix contamination than another-this is a very interesting issue. It could be independent of the pH issue.
These experiments are horribly tedious and of course you probably have no time to perform them. However, all that you can say with confidence is then that for your samples and conditions, column X is better than column Y. This is very useful for you, but of limited value to others.You cannot however say that column X is more stable at high pH conditions than column Y or any details like that.