by
DR » Tue May 24, 2005 1:19 pm
^ what they said - in my experience, a column is deemed "bad" when either it won't meet system suitability, typically due to loss of resolution between the critical peak pair, or because it's back pressure is too high for the user to have any confidence that the system won't quit due to excessive pressure in the middle of a run. Once in a while, a column will not be suitable for a particular analysis because it has been exposed to a lot of triethylamine or something else that has had a lasting impact on its chemistry. A run on that column just doesn't look like it would on a new column, so we tend to tag that column "for analysis of X only" or "Not for analysis of Y".
Unfortunately, there are several ways to render a column useless. In addition to those already mentioned, abuse of a column via exposure to mobile phases well outside rated ranges can damage the packing, they can be "dewetted", if they are whacked hard enough (not as big a problem as it was years ago), plugged with insoluble matter or exposed to a series of immiscible solvents, they can deliver unpredictable results.