MG: yes.
adam: both volume and id are important in different ways.
For efficiency:
- flow rate should scale to the square of the column id.
- extra-column volume should scale to the column volume.
- assuming you scale flow rate and extra-column volume as above, the resolution will scale to the square root of the column length.d
For gradient systems: if you want to run under "equivalent" conditions, you need to keep the average k' of your analytes (k*) constant (assuming linear gradients). That whole topic was discussed earlier:
http://www.sepsci.com/chromforum/viewto ... highlight=
but the bottom line is that k* is proportional to (tG/D%)(F/Vm)(1/S), where:
- tG is gradient time
- D% is the gradient range (final%-initial%)
- F is flow
- Vm is column internal volume
- S is a characteristic of the sample (it's the slope of the k' vs isocratic mobile phase composition).
Given that you've scaled flow and column dimensions as described above, you can tweak the gradient time as necessary to keep the same k*.
Strictly speaking, if your starting % organic is sufficiently low that your analytes stick to the head of the column, dwell volume is irrelevant. In practice, when you get down to small columns (and resulting low flow rates and fast gradients, the time to flush the dwell volume can be the limiting factor on throughput.
I think a lot of the confusion arises because id affects columm volume.