by
gemm » Tue Jul 12, 2005 4:50 pm
we have a waters uplc for integration in our workflow right now. we plan to use it for ht-screening, so speed is essential. to answer your questions:
1. yes, but waters is not the only vendor.
2. it is simply the "need for speed". this means the cycle time from injection to injection and not the time for the chromatografic run only.
3. moderate, but growing. for LCMS application, the requirements for the MS are demanding to keep up with the UPLC. TOF or similar technique is required for reliable detection of the narrow peaks (full scan). existing LC and MS equipment has to be exchanged/upgraded. this is usually not a one-day-decision.
4. not at all. evaluation and analysis is done in house. this includes integration of hardware+software in the existing workflow and usage real life samples instead of test mixtures. visiting other labs to share experience might be an option.
finally some aspects you might consider about the waters uplc: the injector is not (yet) capable of drawing a second sample, while the first one is still on the column. you have to wait until the chromatographic run is finished. this results in a longer cycle time.
the injector is not capable of dissolving samples by drawing solvent from a reservoir. so you have to use sealed plates or taking the risc of solvent evaporation from your plate (we use 384 wellplates).
in general, high speed (or high pressure) LC is done at higher temperatures. this (and the pressure) reduces the lifetime of your columns. some vendors try to compensate this by launching new packing materials, but i did not get the chance to evaluate these yet.
@Apharmd Battler
UPLC offers 2 times improvement in run time over Agilent 1.8 ?m technology with improvement in resolution.
i cannot agree with you in this. did you compare cycle time or just runtime ?