Yijie Liu, Dan Zhang, Ligai Bai, Hongyuan Yan, Haiyan Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In this paper, a mixed-mode monolith was prepared by separately synthesizing hydrophilic and hydrophobic materials at both ends of a chromatography column by a one-step method. The prepared mixed mode monolith was used as solid phase extraction adsorbent for simultaneous enrichment and purification of licorice chalcone A and isoliquiritigenin from licorice combined with high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). It had superior ability to enrich and purify licorice chalcone A and isoliquiritigenin than single hydrophilic or hydrophobic monolith. The method had good linearity in the range of 0.50–400 μg/mL. The linear regression equation was y = 465.45 × − 1.04 and the correlation coefficient was 0.9999. The relative standard deviations (RSDs) of intra-day and inter-day precision were both less than 1.19%. The results showed that the method was simple and accurate, and could be used for the enrichment and purification of licorice chalcone A and isoliquiritigenin from licorice.
期刊介绍:
Separation sciences, in all their various forms such as chromatography, field-flow fractionation, and electrophoresis, provide some of the most powerful techniques in analytical chemistry and are applied within a number of important application areas, including archaeology, biotechnology, clinical, environmental, food, medical, petroleum, pharmaceutical, polymer and biopolymer research. Beyond serving analytical purposes, separation techniques are also used for preparative and process-scale applications. The scope and power of separation sciences is significantly extended by combination with spectroscopic detection methods (e.g., laser-based approaches, nuclear-magnetic resonance, Raman, chemiluminescence) and particularly, mass spectrometry, to create hyphenated techniques. In addition to exciting new developments in chromatography, such as ultra high-pressure systems, multidimensional separations, and high-temperature approaches, there have also been great advances in hybrid methods combining chromatography and electro-based separations, especially on the micro- and nanoscale. Integrated biological procedures (e.g., enzymatic, immunological, receptor-based assays) can also be part of the overall analytical process.