14 research outputs found
11. SPEECH COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS A. FIELD STUDY OF INTERCOM SYSTEMS AND LOUDSPEAKING TELEPHONES
Field study of intercom systems and loudspeaking telephones Lundin, F. J. journal: STL-QPSR volume: 1
Understanding Mixed-Mode Retention Mechanisms in Liquid Chromatography with Hydrophobic Stationary Phases
The chromatographic retention mechanisms of two hydrophobic
bonded phases, octadecyl ethyl-bridged organic/inorganic (BEH-C18) and
straight-chain perfluorohexylpropyl silica (C6F13), have been investigated by
using a homologous series of alkyl-benzenes and perfluoroalkyl acids as test
compounds in a variety of acetonitrile/water mobile phases and at different
temperatures. On both columns, polar compounds exhibited a characteristic U-
shape retention behavior in function of acetonitrile amount in the eluent,
whereas retention of neutral molecules decreased continuously, following an
increase of organic modifier, over the entire mobile phase range. The
dependence of perfluoromethylene selectivity upon eluent composition explains
the typical reversed-phase behavior (decreasing in retention following an
increase of acetonitrile in mobile phase) initially exhibited by perfluoroalkyl
acids, but alone it cannot justify their increasing of retention at organic-rich
mobile phases (approximately >90% v/v for acetonitrile with the C6F13 column
and acetonitrile >80% v/v for the BEH-C18 one). It actually predicts an opposite trend, indicating thus the presence of mixed-
mode retention mechanisms. Indeed it was found that, at organic-rich mobile phases, the transfer from the mobile to the
stationary phase of the polar moiety of molecules drives retention. This finding has been correlated to the excess adsorption
isotherm of acetonitrile/water binary mixtures and thus to the composition of the stationary phase. At organic-rich mobile
phases, in fact, stationary phases are characterized by a positive excess of adsorbed water that creates an “environment” suitable to
the transfer herein of polar group