Bruce: You may be right that the amount of light reaching the detector is the problem. But will it help to increase the bandwidth here? Won't it just be more diodes that will record too low energy? And why does it work with the "old" HPLC's? We don't want to increase the time constant, since the peaks are so narrow.
This is a very severe problem for us (and in the end also Waters), and we have actually stopped buying Acquity systems until this is sorted out. The new systems are now the "not quite UPLC" Agilent 1200. Organic buffers pH 3-5 is present in about 80% of our separations...
Firstly, the problem is insoluble, so please write off all the UPLCs from your books, package up them up, and donate them to me, I promise to give them an excellent, caring, home....
Seriously, I assume they work fine for MS, so we just have address the UV concerns.
Have you measured the UV absorbance profiles of your mobile phases?. I was guessing that at 220nm, you might be on the side of the buffer absorbance, and widening the bandwidth ( or moving to 230 ), might demonstrate what happens if more energy reaches the detector.
I suspect you need to have a play with a few parameters - starting with a mobile phase and detector wavelength that has low noise, then evaluating the effects of wavelength, flowrate, bandwidth, mobile phase absorbance and buffer composition/concentration, etc. on noise.
Ensure your components are fully miscible, especially the buffers, and low wavelength noise can sometimes be attributed to post column precipitation as pressure drops/volume expands. Trace precipitation has a characteristic UV spectrum - a long downhill run ( rather than a peak ), high at 220 going all the way to 300+nm. Obviously, it's not the main volatile buffer component, but any slightly-soluble impurities present in the buffer or solvents.
I'm suspecting that, if the problem is not your mobile phase absorbing/precipitating, then it's the detector cell's sensitivity to flowrate ( diffraction ? ), and lower flowrates may lower the noise, but more data is needed....
Please keep having fun,
Bruce Hamilton