by
lmh » Tue Feb 14, 2012 10:39 am
and one practical point: binary pumps with high-pressure mixing will very often supply the correct solvent mix even at near-zero back-pressure, whereas quaternary pumps with low-pressure mixing very often rely on a decent back-pressure to close the gradient proportioning valves, which means that if there isn't a good back pressure (>20bar), they pump random mixtures instead of the correct mixture. This is of relevance if you try to do a gradient test without a back-pressure restrictor, or if you use the LC part of an LC-MS system merely as a solvent-supply for the MS.
(explanation: the gradient proportioning valve is 4 valves, each letting one solvent into a mixing chamber. Each valve is opened in turn during the pump's cycle to let a little of its solvent in. To make a 30/60/10 mix of A:B:C, for example, the valves would open for 30%, 60%, 10% and 0% of the cycle. If they don't close promptly, you get the wrong mix. They're often opened electronically, and allowed to close under back-pressure).