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- Posts: 37
- Joined: Tue Mar 11, 2008 1:35 am
Does anyone know what causes such a change in peak shape? Can anyone recommend a good resource that might give some explainations for various changes in peak shape and how they could be interpreted?
Thanks.
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Discussions about HPLC, CE, TLC, SFC, and other "liquid phase" separation techniques.

The method is a single, quick method used to determine TFA/Acetate content of lyopholized peptide. I've determined that the LOD is around 150-200ng for TFA which is plenty for quantifying the TFA content of a TFA salt, but not sensitive enough for determining residual TFA content of an acetate salt (which we've seen as low as a hundred ppm), which I figured worked out to be a detection limit of around 5-15ng depending on how much sample I was going to use in my preps. I did a few tests and determined that the detector noise was independent of flow rate, so I figured I could increase the signal to noise ratio by decreasing the flow rate substantially. I could also increase the signal by increasing the amount injected, but that's where I began to run into the loss of efficiency.The overload on a column is a function of the chromatographic conditions. A change in the column dimensions won't help.
Please tell us more about your analytes, and the concentration and pH of the buffers (?) that you have used. There are ways to improve the lodability drastically, if your analytes are ionic, but it may require to change the chromatographic conditions.
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