Doesn't Bischoff Chromatography offer a system similar to this, wherein they offer several different phases of columns that couple to each other in order to influence separations?
viewtopic.php?t=5522&highlight=bischoff
viewtopic.php?t=7119&highlight=poplc
Granted, the system Bischoff offers is for different phases, rather than the similar phases offered in the cited paper (C1, C4, C18). I would wonder, then, based on the two threads cited (amongst probably many here and elsewhere) whether band broadening between columns, reduced plate height, and counteractive selectivity might be a problem in a system like this.
Also, from Uwe Neue on another similar thread:
viewtopic.php?t=6859&highlight=poplc
"A bit of caution: The additivity of retention times works well when you combine columns in isocratic separations. It is more complicated in gradients. If the two columns have very similar retention, then there is a reasonable chance that you get new chromatograms with some form of scrambled selectivity. Also, in your studies switch the sequence of the columns. This can give you different retention patterns also. But don't be surprised if 1 + 1 does not equal 2 in gradients with different columns. Good luck!"
Personally, I use a two-column isocratic system in my work that I inherited, where we use a column designed for carbamate pesticides in series with a C-18. Works better than either column alone, except I don't have a 375 mm C-18 or 375 mm carbamate column to test that statement, so...