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Quantitation of Sodium Permagnate
Discussions about HPLC, CE, TLC, SFC, and other "liquid phase" separation techniques.
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I know this sounds strang, but does anyone have experiences on quantitation of Sodium permagnate using HPLC system? What kind of detector i should use for that?
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- tom jupille
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It does sound strange. Why not just titrate?
-- Tom Jupille
LC Resources / Separation Science Associates
tjupille@lcresources.com
+ 1 (925) 297-5374
LC Resources / Separation Science Associates
tjupille@lcresources.com
+ 1 (925) 297-5374
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The marketing team just gave a quote to a client with this suggestion, using HPLC to quantify sodium permagnate in a mixture of organic chemicals. I have no choice but to go along with the decision. Besides, the columetric method might be too labor intensive.
I have seen/read a method for ammonium ions using ion exchange column equipped with a ion detector (http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=& ... ia*tobacco). I was wondering if simular approach can be done using ion exchange column for permagnate.
Since the company doesn't have any ion detector available, what other choices i have for the detector?
Suggestions?
I have seen/read a method for ammonium ions using ion exchange column equipped with a ion detector (http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=& ... ia*tobacco). I was wondering if simular approach can be done using ion exchange column for permagnate.
Since the company doesn't have any ion detector available, what other choices i have for the detector?
Suggestions?
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You can do quantitation either using UV (permaganate ion) or ELSD (both sodium and pemanganate) we have a few application for simultaneous guantitation of organic and inorganic compounds.
If you would like to retain pemanganate you need anion exchange column.
For sodium you need cation-exchange column. You can retain both of them on mixed mode Primesep AB column. I will see tomorrow if we have pemanganate in the lab. May be we can do a fast method for you.
You can also check the following links:
http://hplcmethods.com/compound_081.php (sodium, zinc, chloride, etc.)
http://hplcmethods.com/compound_018.php (ions along with dextromethorphan)
You can also download the brochure about determination of ions along with organic compounds:
http://allsep.com/brochures/PrimesepIC_Rev3.pdf
And poster for "Simultaneous Separation of Organic and Inorganic Compounds in Single HPLC Run"
http://allsep.com/brochures/OrganicInorganic.pdf
Regards,
Vlad
If you would like to retain pemanganate you need anion exchange column.
For sodium you need cation-exchange column. You can retain both of them on mixed mode Primesep AB column. I will see tomorrow if we have pemanganate in the lab. May be we can do a fast method for you.
You can also check the following links:
http://hplcmethods.com/compound_081.php (sodium, zinc, chloride, etc.)
http://hplcmethods.com/compound_018.php (ions along with dextromethorphan)
You can also download the brochure about determination of ions along with organic compounds:
http://allsep.com/brochures/PrimesepIC_Rev3.pdf
And poster for "Simultaneous Separation of Organic and Inorganic Compounds in Single HPLC Run"
http://allsep.com/brochures/OrganicInorganic.pdf
Regards,
Vlad
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If this is permanganate it is violet and, threfore, also absorbs in the visible.
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pochengjean,
I would stay away from HPLC for quantitation of permanganate. There's not much chance of it making it through a column intact. It will decompose quantitatively when retained via anion exchange (at least when the retention site is organic as in the case of Primesep)!
I would stay away from HPLC for quantitation of permanganate. There's not much chance of it making it through a column intact. It will decompose quantitatively when retained via anion exchange (at least when the retention site is organic as in the case of Primesep)!
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Producing Primatenonsep?
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