You are doing reversed-phase chromatography (RP).
Mobile phases in RP are generally mixtures of water (or an aqueous buffer) and a polar organic solvent (in your case, acetonitrile). Water is the "weak" solvent and acetonitrile is the "strong" solvent -- which means that the more organic solvent in your mobile phase, the shorter the retention.
Acetic acid is an organic solvent that happens to be somewhat acidic. It has a pKa of about 4.8, so in order to get the pH down to 2, you need somewhere around 30 - 40% acetic acid -- which means that about 1/3 of your "buffer" consisted of acetic acid. In effect your mobile phase is 40% water, 20% acetic acid, 40% acetonitrile.
Now, that column has a dead volume (Vm) of about 2.3 mL (you can estimate that from Vm ≈ 0.5 x L x dc^2 (where L is the column length and dc is the column internal diameter). At a flow rate of 1.2 mL/min that gives you a dead time of about 2 minutes. Which means that a retention time of 22 minutes represents a k' value of 10 (the definition is here:
http://www.lcresources.com/resources/TSWiz/hs210.htm ). That is high for a single-component analysis (k' ranges generally run from about 2 to about 10).
Now for advice:
1. If you are following a compendial procedure or a validated method, follow it *exactly*. Minor adjustments are allowed, but what you did was *not* minor.
2. If it's not a validated method, then start over again. Microbondapak C18 was introduced in the early 70's and is the "VW Beetle" of HPLC columns (if you're in North America, I'm not talking about the "New Beetle", I'm talking about the original rear-engine, 60 hp, air cooled bug). It was a great column in its day, but it's day ended three decades ago. You can go to virtually any column vendor's web site and find appropriate conditions for ibuprofen on a newer (shorter, faster) column.
3. You'll be less confused if you learn more about how HPLC works. A great starting point is Mike Dong's book "Modern HPLC for Practicing Scientists". Here's the link to it on Amazon:
http://tinyurl.com/cvxumad. I'll also throw in a plug for my web course "Fundamentals of HPLC" running next month:
http://www.lcresources.com/training/trfund.html