It is sometimes hard to take me seriously, even for me!
Let me be clear, I have not been a practising chromatographer for about 10 years, I make my living elsewhere these days, and it is only by serendipity that I was drawn to this forum and made a few posts.
OTOH I have knocked up a few methods that were included in pharmacopoeias, and successfully challenged pharmacopoeal methods in the past.
I don't like to boast, but I think you need to know that this old fart is not just some machtmensch trolling. A few posts is not much to work on, and
sometimes I say the entire opposite of what is needed - but keep digging, that's just me misunderstanding things. And not being sufficiently clear.
HW Mueller - no need for clarification - I understood that you were suggesting that a small volume injection would reduce the solvent "difference" interactions. You merely reminded me of a separation I did about 25 years ago, when 4 sharp peaks on a 0.5 microlitre sample would transform into a drawing of a stegosaurus using a 20 microlitre loop ... I only wanted to point out that a small sample can give a nice chromatogram in addition.
Not so useful for drugs work, in any case, because that sort of thing can allow decomposition products to limbo-dance under the detection limits. Not that it matters here ... if the dilute and shoot is to succeed, there is only one permissible sample concentration.
Kerri - your Hypercarb results offered promise, you didn't realise how good they were. One component of three eluting is GOOD, if they are similar compounds - it says you are close, you just need to get closer.
You have also determined two additives that can control your separation.
But you did not understand my musings. Ok I got something backwards again - I get my mords wuddled regularly. So I'm just going to say what I would do, then let you dig the bits out you need.
If I were looking at this separation, I would use an A/B gradient pump with A running eluent + 0.05% formic acid, and B running the same eluent + 0.07% diethanolamine.
Running at 100% A would have everything whizzing through, so go for 90% A / 10% B for a start, then adjust depending on what happens.
Poor separation, low retention, increase the proportion of B. Vice versa, decrease B. Get the needed separation, but retention time is unsuitable, adjust the major organic component content of the eluent. Muck about with it until you have a suitable system.
When you have found an appropriate A/B ratio, you should tune the method by running that mix as "A" against a B eluent without the formic acid and diethanolamine, to determine a low concentration which will give consistent results repetitively. Go low, and the retention times will "walk about" with each consecutive injection. Go below that, and some very strange things will happen.
To be honest, you don't really need the last bit on this separation if you have it working. But if you are using straight chain sulphonic acids, the tuning step can save a lot of money.
There is also the consideration that the eluent cannot be stable (it is good enough for a day's work, but after a few days it is jungle juice). From experience, you can work these sort of solutions from yesterday afternoon into this morning if you chill them overnight, but definitive work should always be performed on freshly prepared eluent.
LOL who said it was easy ...