by
MG » Thu Nov 18, 2004 8:10 pm
you ran your stuff until peak form changed yet the analytical column was unscathed? Very interesting.
I won't say it was unscathed, but the immediate problem is nearly always solved by replacing the guard. I did have some food sample extracts where it helped to backflush the column with high organic, in addition to changing the guard.
What size guard was that?
2.1 x 10 mm, Betasil Javelin C18
What did you use to flush? Organic? If so you probably cemented some proteins to the guard.
In many of my methods, I'll have a mostly aqueous hold to wash off any polar crud or salts, a fast gradient (10 min or less) to elute my compounds, then a mostly organic hold to wash off any nonpolar crud. It is possible that I am cementing proteins to the guard. Any way to avoid this, or is it better that they cement to the guard rather than going through the column?
No chaotropics or detergents, used?
Not usually, but some plasma extracts may contain ion pair reagents.
Did your guard develop a void? I can´t recall ever to get an indication to replace a guard other than a pressure increase or shoulder formation due to voids.
I always kind of assumed that it was due to the formation of a void, but I don't know. It starts out looking like a tail, with increasing retention times accompanying. If I let it go long enough, it will start to look like a shoulder on the back end of the peak. Occasionally when I replace one, I will notice that a high backpressure accompanies the chromatographic problem, but the backpressure is usually still tolerable. In other words, the deterioration in peak shape is what motivates me to change the guard, not the backpressure.