by 
danko » Fri Feb 20, 2009 10:07 am
													
 
						
					 
					
						Hi Apcul,
Yes, you’re right – sulphate is largely utilized in protein separation context. It is important to mention though, that it is not related to its acidic/alkali properties, but rather to its water structuring ditto. It’s a longer story, but very shortly told, it forces the protein molecule to expose its hydrophobic domain/s to the surrounding environment, which consequently facilitates the retention on a reversed phase material. If it sounds interesting you can find out more about it by reading stuff like Hofmeister series etc.
The buffer thing in this particular case is more related to the phosphate part of the eluent. Adding some phosphoric acid, followed by adjusting the pH to 2.3 with ethanolamine results in the following ions 1) ethanolammonium 2) phosphate – which means you have a buffer (pKa 1 for phosphoric acid is about 2.2 so everything is looking fine).
The problem is then, what happens if the pH is 2.3 without adding any ethanolamine?
Btw, I’m not completely convinced that the pH is 2.3 anyway, because the pH is to be adjusted after addition of sodium sulphate. That means that the sodium ions in this high concentration influence the pH reading – it simply “cheatsâ€