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Aglient/waters C18 columns' carbon content comparison

Discussions about HPLC, CE, TLC, SFC, and other "liquid phase" separation techniques.

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Hi all,

Could anybody tell me the carbon content comparison of different series of agilent/waters C18 columns (eg. zorbax, eclipse, symmetry shield, atlantis T3 ...).

Thanks a lot! :D

MHD
Just curious, what are you comparing carbon content for?

For Waters columns, specifications can be easily found on Waters website.

Atlantis T3: 14%
Symmetry: 19%

Zorbax Eclipse Plus: 9%
Just curious, what are you comparing carbon content for?

For Waters columns, specifications can be easily found on Waters website.

Atlantis T3: 14%
Symmetry: 19%

Zorbax Eclipse Plus: 9%
Thanks for your information!
For I think when separate polar compounds, choose a column with higher carbon content can give longer retention time, and it is more convenient than using HILIC or NPLC.
For I think when separate polar compounds, choose a column with higher carbon content can give longer retention time, and it is more convenient than using HILIC or NPLC.

I suspect that approach may be misguided for at least a couple of reasons:

First of all, carbon content by itself is only a crude indicator of reversed-phase retention. Surface area and bonding chemistry will also get into the act. A thick polymeric phase on a low-surface area silica for example, may be less retentive than a monolayer coverage on a high-surface-area silica despite having a higher carbon content. If you want a better measure of reversed-phase retentivity, go to the PQRI database on the USP web site (http://www.usp.org/USPNF/columns.html)and look at the "H" parameters. The documentation on that site gives a good explanation of the underlying principles.

Second, if you are looking for better retention of polor compounds (since you mentioned HILIC as an alternative), a more hydrophobic stationary phase would make things worse. Arguably, a better approach would be to try one of the "embedded polar group" columns (sometimes called "amide" columns which provide at least some opportunity for your analytes to hydrogen-bond to the stationary phase.
-- Tom Jupille
LC Resources / Separation Science Associates
tjupille@lcresources.com
+ 1 (925) 297-5374
Tom,

Thanks. Very good explanation.
Excel
5 posts Page 1 of 1

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