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- Posts: 122
- Joined: Fri Sep 21, 2007 7:43 pm
This was not my idea
Thanks for any help anyone can give!
Stephen
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Discussions about HPLC, CE, TLC, SFC, and other "liquid phase" separation techniques.
Actually, the latest USP revision allows greater than +/- 25% on diameter (turns out that wan't enough to get from 4.6mm to 3.0mm to 2.1mm, etc.) as long as the linear velocity remains the same. From USP 32-NF 27: "Column Inner Diameter (HPLC): can be adjusted provided that the linear velocity is kept constant [see Flow rate (HPLC)]." For flow rate there is an equation.Hamilton? Bio-Rad?
I'm guessing that the packing itself should not be too hard to find, but that the problem is in the column dimensions. USP allows "de facto" adjustments to conditions to meet system suitability. If memory serves, the allowed range is +/- 70% on length and +/- 25% on diameter.
I did not have any luck searching for it online, so I did exactly that and made an inquiry with a contact at Waters. Hopefully that might yield some results! I will also look into the suppliers Tom suggested.This looks like a SEC/GPC application. If this is the case, do not change the column diameter or flow rates of the original procedure. The columns are available from Waters. I do not have the catalogue here, but inquiry for the microStyragel columns to Waters should help, if you can't find it in the catalogue or online yourself.
Done. Thanks very much for your help!If you want a quick response from Hamilton send an email to:
scott.meikrantz(at)hamiltoncompany.com
and tell him Robert H. sent you.
he is the HPLC lab manager there and knows what is in stock and if it is not in stock how long it will take to get it out the door.
...and yet I live in hope that maybe, somehow, this time it will be differentI've contacted the appropriate "responsible contact" listed in the USP monograph twice before, and the only thing contact did was to state "refer to <621> Chromatography.
On a different question when I asked why <611> used ACN as the internal standard for ethanol analysis instead of the more-similar n-propanol everyone else seems to use, contact response was that "no one questioned that when being reviewed". So I'm not so sure that the he really have that much hands-on experience, may just have "book learnin' ".
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