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- Posts: 10
- Joined: Thu Dec 11, 2008 11:42 am
The pharmaceutical lab I work in uses both Waters and Agilent HPLC (recent additions to the instrument pool). One of the separation methods gives good plate count on Waters (c.a. 4000), and much poorer on Agilent (c.a. 2000). The method temperature is 50 Celsius. The columns used for the comparison were the same type and same supplier (I can't guarantee they were the very same column though).
I'm quite confident the plate count issue comes from the temperature inhomogeneity of the Agilent oven (the oven heats up one side of the column more than the other, which causes band broadening).
When I keep the column against the fins of the heater to get a more even column temperature, the plate counts rises to 2900.
When I keep the column against the fins of the heater and keep some insulating material between the column and the compartment door to prevent heat loss, the plate count reaches 3700, nearly as good as the Waters system.
However, the retention time of the peaks also increase with repeat injections when I insulate the column. The plate count/resolution remain good, but the peaks take longer to elute.

Any suggestions as to what the cause might be?
Notes. The method is isocratic, 0.6 mL/min, 70% ACN, 30% amonium acetate buffer. The analyte is derivative of Rapamycin. The column (YMC pro C18, 3um, 150mm) is on right heater (6uL volume) to preheat the mobile phase properly. Pressure was identical between the repeat injections. Pressure with the insulation was a bit lower than without insulation, which I attribute to the lower viscosity when the column is hotter.
Thanks