Thanks you for your input.
I tested 100mg/1ml Hypersep NH2 columns.
I am doing lipid class separation using the conventional protocol: After washing the column twice with 1 ml n-heptane, elute with 1 ml chlorofrom:2-proh (2:1), 1ml 2% acetic acid in ether, and finally 1ml methanol twice.
Then do a derivation reaction by adding acetyl chloride before injection on GC.
I see contamination peaks in all 3 eluants, also around 16:0, 18:0 (have not put any efforts to identify what exactly they are). They are other smaller late peaks also.
The contamination problem from plastic housing are reported in some articles. Particularly, this article,
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3145937, has data for Bond Elut Aminopropyl bonded silica column, they mentioned the contamination in the free fatty acid part is equivalent to the amount of FFA present in 5 mg of myocardial tissue or 10-15 ml of plasma, which is crazy.
Unfortunately, when I did the very limited number of controls, the peaks showed different peak profile in both heights and peak numbers.
I am only interested in the last elution, the supposedly phospholipid portion. I have not seen any reports talking about contamination in this part, but none of the reports used plastic columns . I never used plasticware before this for any lipid work, I am just afraid of plastics.
I am seriously considering to pack my own column using disposable glass pastuer pipet at this point.
Not sure which columns you tested or what solvent washings and volumes you are using.
We are currently testing the BondElut Aminopropyl bonded silica columns from Agilent. Currently we are using the standards ones, but we have inquired about getting these columns with stainless steel frits, which you just need a special part number for (they are much more expensive). Our blank runs are only showing two very small peaks that would interfere with C16:0 and C18:0, we are estimating it would be less then 0.1% of an actual sample peak and at the moment are contemplating considering whether or not this contaminant would make a difference, leaning strongly towards no as these are not our main peaks of interest. These contaminant peaks are also very reproducible from blank run to blank run, so we are also considering subtracting out a blank sample with each run.
Hope this helps.