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Countercurrent chromatography in analytical chemistry (IUPAC technical report)
Authors
Abbey
Abe
+111 more
Abe
Abe
Akiba
Akiba
Akiba
Alain Berthod
Bauer
Bauer
Berthod
Berthod
Berthod
Berthod
Berthod
Berthod
Billardello
Boris Spivakov
Chen
Chen
Chen
Chen
Chmutova
Chmutova
Chmutova
Conway
Conway
Conway
Countercurrent Chromatography
Dekker
Fedotov
Fitz
Friesen
Fujita
Garcia Dominguez
Hashimoto
Hashimoto
Ian A. Sutherland
Ikai
Ito
Ito
Ito
Ito
Ito
Jin
Jin
Jin
Kawamura
Kawamura
Kidwell
Kitazume
Kitazume
Kitazume
Kitazume
Kitazume
Kong
Lee
Lee
Lee
Lee
Liu
Ma
Ma
Mandava
Mandava
Marston
Marston
Marston
Maryutina
Maryutina
Maryutina
Maryutina
Maryutina
Matsuda
Menet
Muralidharan
Nakamura
Nakamura
Oleg Shpigun
Pauli
Pukhovskaya
Ruiz
Ruiz
Ruth
Schaufelberger
Schaufelberger
Schreiber
Shang
Spivakov
Spivakov
Spivakov
Stark
Sutherland
Tanaka
Tatyana Maryutina
Thurman
Tian
Usuda
Usuda
Wang
Wang
Watkins
Winterhalter
Wood
Wu
Yanagida
Yang
Yang
Yang
Yoshida
Yu
Zhang
Zhang
Publication date
1 January 2009
Publisher
'International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC)'
Doi
Abstract
© 2009 IUPACCountercurrent chromatography (CCC) is a generic term covering all forms of liquid-liquid chromatography that use a support-free liquid stationary phase held in place by a simple centrifugal or complex centrifugal force field. Biphasic liquid systems are used with one liquid phase being the stationary phase and the other being the mobile phase. Although initiated almost 30 years ago, CCC lacked reliable columns. This is changing now, and the newly designed centrifuges appearing on the market make excellent CCC columns. This review focuses on the advantages of a liquid stationary phase and addresses the chromatographic theory of CCC. The main difference with classical liquid chromatography (LC) is the variable volume of the stationary phase. There are mainly two different ways to obtain a liquid stationary phase using centrifugal forces, the hydrostatic way and the hydrodynamic way. These two kinds of CCC columns are described and compared. The reported applications of CCC in analytical chemistry and comparison with other separation and enrichment methods show that the technique can be successfully used in the analysis of plants and other natural products, for the separation of biochemicals and pharmaceuticals, for the separation of alkaloids from medical herbs, in food analysis, etc. On the basis of the studies of the last two decades, recommendations are also given for the application of CCC in trace inorganic analysis and in radioanalytical chemistry
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