by
lmh » Mon Oct 13, 2008 12:16 pm
You have to think about what, physically, is happening on the column. This is a hand-wavy version, so someone who knows more about it can shoot it down in flames:
If you imagine a theoretical zero-length column with beautiful analytes that "come off" at a particular percentage, then all peaks will have zero-width, and a shallow gradient will put them further apart.
Now consider analytes that behave a bit more realistically, so that at 50% acetonitrile they begin to come off the column, partitioning between the column and the eluent. The peak will now have a width, as material on the column comes off gradually to maintain the correct partitioning ratio.
In a real gradient, the percentage is increasing, so the peak will come off faster and faster. Once nearly all the peak is "off", the amount remaining on the collumn is shrinking, so even though partitioning is now strongly in favour of the solvent, material will be leaving the column more slowly again.
(irrelevant to this discussion, but on top of this, material will diffuse, and wash in and out of any dead volumes in the system, so even if a narrow peak leaves the column, a Gaussian-style broader peak will arrive at the detector.)
So in a real system, if you make the gradient too steep, peak A will take a certain volume of solvent to elute, and the steep gradient means that peak B might begin to encounter eluting conditions before all of A is gone. This creates bad resolution.
Also, if you make your gradient too steep, with a column of measurable volume, it's hard to know exactly what percentage different parts of the column are really seeing.
But if the gradient becomes unnecessarily slow, peak A will begin to come off, but do so very slowly; it will take longer to get enough volume of the (low percentage) solvent through to elute the first bit of peak A, before the precentage climbs enough for the elution to "really get going". This makes very slow broad peaks.
So the general situation is that if you're eluting using roughly the flow rate described by the manufacturers, and your gradient has the same steepness as the manufactuer's gradient, then the chances are it is already near optimal (manufacturers can't afford to show unoptimal gradients in their brochures). If you reduce the steepness, you will probably find that increased peak-width wipes out any benefit from greater difference in retention time.