by
lmh » Tue Apr 07, 2015 9:19 am
I'm in favour of keeping columns small. Yes, the efficiency of a narrow-bore column of the same length will be slightly lower than the wider bore column, but depending on your system, this may be irrelevant, and there are things you can do:
In real life, if you're coupling to an MS, if you use a 4.6mm column less than 400mm long(!) you will probably find that its optimum flow-rate vastly exceeds the optimum flow-rate of the MS, and if you start doing flow-splitting, you will probably find you've reduced the efficiency of your system. You are right that if you use a 2mm column, the naturally optimum flow-rate of the column is far more likely to be directly compatible with electrospray MS.
If you have lost too much efficiency, you can always use a slightly longer column to recover it. In theory, this would make your method slower, but in practice nowadays it's rarely the case. Most 4.6mm methods are running at rather less than the ideal flow rate of the column, so with a 2mm column it is likely you will run the method at a faster linear flow anyway - potentially speeding things up. Particularly, if you're doing a gradient method, you have to consider re-equilibration, and a combination of a good, modern, UPLC pump and a pressure-tolerant column is a sure-fire winner here: you can re-equilibrate much faster than you'd consider with a big old column. Of course, if you're stuck with an old system with a huge extra-column volume, you may be obliged to stick to matching, 4.6mm columns.
Columns are tools (different ones are right for different applications): the proteomics crowd clearly feel that sensitivity is more important than anything else, and despite wanting high resolution for complex peptide mixtures, they still regularly choose nano-flow. I like 2mm because I don't like throwing away vast bottles of very expensive and environmentally unfriendly solvents. My feeling is that if the loss of resolution between 4.6 and 2mm is the deciding factor for a method, then the method is sitting on a knife-edge anyway, and just waiting to go wrong...