2 research outputs found
Capillary Electrochromatography−Mass Spectrometry of Nonionic Surfactants
The Triton X (TX)-series are alkylphenol polyethoxylates
-type nonionic surfactants of varying numbers of ethylene
oxide units. Applications include industrial and household detergent formulations as well as emulsifying agents.
For analysis of these surfactants, capillary electrochromatography-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry
(CEC-ESI-MS) offers several unique advantages over the
traditional hyphenation methods based on HPLC-MS.
These include higher plate numbers attainable in CEC-MS, as well as more compatible flow rate (submicroliter)
when coupled to ESI-MS and, perhaps most importantly,
less consumption of toxic and costly organic solvents. In
this work, different CEC-ESI-MS parameters such as
mobile-phase composition, sheath liquid, and spray chamber parameters were optimized to provide suitable and
sensitive analysis of short-, medium-, and long-chain
length (e.g., n = 1−16) TX-series nonionic surfactants.
The optimized CEC-ESI-MS conditions were mobile phase
containing 90/10 ACN/2.5 mM Tris, pH 8, sheath liquid
containing 50/50 MeOH/10 mM HCO2NH4 delivered at
5 μL/min, spray chamber set to drying gas flow of 6 mL/min, nebulizer pressure of 5 psi, and drying gas temperature set to 200 °C. This optimization is followed by the
more challenging separation of very long chain TX-series
with a large number (n = 30−70) of ethoxy units, which
were initially found to exhibit extreme retention using the
developed method. It was observed that through the
addition of small volume fraction of polar-aprotic tetrahydrofuran solvent to the running buffer, the retention time
could be significantly reduced thus enhancing the feasibility for CEC-ESI-MS analysis of these very long chain
nonionic surfactants for the first time. The detection limit
was ∼37 μg/mL total octylphenol ethoxylate for TX-45;
acceptable precision of migration time (n =
3) and peak area (∼4% RSD, n = 3) were achieved
Amino Acid Bound Surfactants: A New Synthetic Family of Polymeric Monoliths Opening Up Possibilities for Chiral Separations in Capillary Electrochromatography
By combining a novel chiral amino-acid surfactant containing
an
acryloyl amide tail, a carbamate linker, and a leucine headgroup of
different chain lengths with a conventional cross-linker and a polymerization
technique, a new “one-pot” synthesis for the generation
of amino-acid based polymeric monolith is realized. The method promises
to open up the discovery of an amino-acid based polymeric monolith
for chiral separations in capillary electrochromatography (CEC). The
possibility of enhanced chemoselectivity for simultaneous separation
of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine containing multiple chiral centers
and the potential use of this amino-acid surfactant bound column for
CEC and CEC coupled to mass spectrometric detection are demonstrated
