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1. The manufacturer suggests that the cause of this could be the removal of acetone from B by the in-line vacuum degasser. Is this likely?
2. Does anyone have a better method?
J
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Discussions about HPLC, CE, TLC, SFC, and other "liquid phase" separation techniques.
1. The manufacturer suggests that the cause of this could be the removal of acetone from B by the in-line vacuum degasser. Is this likely?
Not necessarily better, but there is nothing sacred about acetone; all you need is a transparent A solution and a B solution with about 1AU worth of background. A dilute solution of HNO3 combined with a shorter wavelength should also work for B. Or you could use A=MeOH and B=0.1% acetone; that would give you a closer vapor pressure match. By the way, λmax for acetone is 265 nm; the fact that your procedure calls for 254 suggests that it's been around for a while. What kind of results have you had in the past?2. Does anyone have a better method?
Thanks for your reply Tom. I find it interesting that anomalies occur at midpoint. Why might this be so? My systems are Shimadzu 10ATvps by the way.As a final comment, I would run the 10% steps all through the range. Proportioning anomalies near the midpoint are not unusual with low-pressure mixing systems.
I find it interesting that anomalies occur at midpoint. Why might this be so?

need a length of small bore tubing after your detector to maintain a slight, but steady pressure in your flow cell
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