固定相和色谱技术的发展趋势

IF 2.8 3区 工程技术 Q2 CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL
Michael Lämmerhofer
{"title":"固定相和色谱技术的发展趋势","authors":"Michael Lämmerhofer","doi":"10.1002/jssc.70215","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Chromatography and column technology have undergone significant developments over the past two decades. Highly efficient small sub-2 µm particles and core–shell particle columns have become the new state-of-the-art in liquid chromatography (LC), with applications ranging from pharmaceutical and food analysis to environmental and forensic sciences, and bioanalysis including omics technologies (metabolomics, lipidomics, and proteomics). Peak widths of a few seconds can be achieved and run times with short columns are significantly reduced. Other chromatographic modes besides reversed-phase LC (RPLC), the standard workhorse in (U)HPLC, have found also broader adoption and application in many fields. In short, LC stationary phase technology has become more diverse. A driving force for new developments is new application fields which need new column technologies, like new drug modalities, challenges in environmental and bioanalysis, and new demands to characterize bioparticles like viruses, virus-like particles, microvesicles, and lipid-emulsion formulations. Short monolithic columns are often employed for (bio)particle separations. In many of these application fields, columns with deactivated column hardware surface have shown improved recoveries and reduced peak tailing, which lead to better detection sensitivity. These trends are reflected by the articles submitted to the special collection “<i>Stationary phases and column technologies</i>,” an entirely digital special issue, which was collecting invited articles over the period from April to September 2024. The contents and major ideas of the articles are briefly summarized below.</p><p>Multiple papers of this special collection refer to the development of stationary phases for hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC). HILIC stationary phases are typically based on silica with polar-modified surface chemistries. In one work, Zhao and coworkers synthesized a novel zwitterionic polymer grafted silica stationary phase by bonding poly(ethylene maleic anhydride) molecules on the surface of aminopropyl silica via multiple binding sites, followed by ammonolysis of remaining maleic anhydride groups through a nucleophilic substitution reaction with ethylenediamine [<span>1</span>]. The zwitterionic character resulted from carboxylic groups and primary amine groups. Zeta-potential measurements showed a charge reversal at about pH 5.5 from a positive surface charge below to negative surface charge above this isoelectric point of the material. Retention models were evaluated and thermodynamic analysis was employed to get a closer look into the retention mechanism. Nucleosides and nucleic bases, sugars, and Amadori products were successfully separated under HILIC conditions. Polymer particles are less commonly employed as support materials for HILIC columns as they have a hydrophobic character and a tendency to swell in organic solvents. In an article by Yang and coworkers, the high hydrophobicity and chemical inertness of poly(styrene-divinylbenzene) (PS-DVB) microspheres were overcome by grafting of an acrylamide-terminated lysine zwitterionic monomer onto the PS-DVB beads by free-radical polymerization to afford a polar stationary phase suitable for HILIC [<span>2</span>]. The modified beads showed zwitterionic surface chemistry originating from the α-amino group and carboxylic acid functionalities of lysine, which was polymerized and bonded via the ε-amino moiety through an acrylamide monomer. The authors characterized the stationary phase by the Tanaka HILIC test and compared the characteristics with multiple commercial HILIC phases. Column bleeding was also compared to commercial phases and was found to be significantly less than multiple brush-type HILIC phases. The new stationary phase showed a good performance for the HILIC separation of saccharides. Liang, Ke, and coworkers prepared low swelling and high mechanical strength organosilane hybrid polydivinylbenzene microspheres for hydrophilic interaction chromatography applications [<span>3</span>]. The driving force for this work was to overcome limitations of low-bleed HILIC stationary phases based on polymer matrices, which, due to the high content of the organic phase in the HILIC mobile phase, exhibit typically some swelling of the polymer matrix. A seed swelling polymerization approach with polystyrene latices as templates and divinylbenzene, as well as 3-methacryloxypropyltrimethoxysilane as monomers was employed to synthesize monodispersed beads. During this polymerization process of the beads, new crosslink bridges can be formed due to the methoxysilane moieties by condensation reaction, besides the radical polymerization of the DVB monomer. The increase in the degree of crosslinking was found conducive to the improvement of the resistance to swelling as well as to the mechanical strength of the microspheres. HILIC surface characteristics were introduced by a radical-addition reaction of cysteine via thiol-ene click reaction leading to zwitterionic surface. The stationary phase was compared to a formerly prepared Cys-clicked silica phase (ClickXIon) and found comparable in the majority of chromatographic properties. Another study addressed the screening of a number of commercial (silica, amide, and sulfobetaine) HILIC and RP columns to find proper conditions for the analysis of di- and tripeptides adducted with mustard agents originating from their reaction with albumin [<span>4</span>]. The goal was to develop an analytical LC-MS/MS assay that can be used to monitor retrospectively the exposure to mustard agents. Finally, a zwitterionic sulfobetaine type ZIC-HILIC column was selected for the HILIC and RP with C18 phase for RPLC analysis of an adducted tripeptide corresponding to adduct on Cys34 (of human albumin) to allow their complementary analysis in the low ng/mL concentration range as a marker of exposure to mustard agents.</p><p>A group of papers focused on new developments of chiral stationary phases (CSPs) for enantiomer separation. In one study, a chiral monolithic capillary column was synthesized by post-modification of an in situ prepared poly(glycidylmethacrylate-co-ethylene dimethacrylate) monolith with L-cysteine as chiral selector via ring-opening by nucleophilic substitution through nucleophilic attack of the epoxy group by the thiol of cysteine [<span>5</span>]. Dansyl amino acids could be successfully separated. Chiral macrocyclic compounds such as chiral crown ethers, cyclodextrins, and cyclofructans turned out to be successful chiral selectors in commercially available columns. Inspired by this class of macrocyclic structures, Yuan and coworkers presented a new CSP based on macrocyclic 1,1’-binaphthyl chiral polyimine [<span>6</span>]. Two molar equivalents each of axially chiral (<i>S</i>)-2,2’-dihydroxy-[1,1’-binaphthalene]-3,3’-dicarboxaldehyde and 1,2-phenylenediamine were reacted to an imine functionalized macrocyclic chiral compound. After introduction of an ether linkage with terminal ene group, it was immobilized to thiol silica via thiol-ene click reaction. The resultant CSP was evaluated in normal-phase and reversed-phase elution modes for its enantiomer separation capability which could be verified by full baseline separation of structurally diverse chiral compounds. Lv, Wang, and coworkers introduced a new composite material as CSP which was obtained by immobilization of reduced porous organic cages with homochiral secondary amine structure on silica gel, followed by coating of amylose tris(3,5-dimethylphenyl carbamate) [<span>7</span>]. The resultant material was carefully characterized by FT-IR (indicating the immobilized carbamate functionalities of the polysaccharide selector), elemental analysis (which confirmed the presence of nitrogen-containing cage and polysaccharide selector structures), nitrogen adsorption–desorption measurements (providing information on the specific surface area of 305 m<sup>2</sup>/g and pore size of 7.6 nm), thermogravimetric analysis (showing a significant weight loss between 100°C and 800°C of 18.8% which corresponds to the mass of the immobilized organic layer), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) (showing an increased surface roughness on the silica beads after surface modification). A number of structurally different chiral compounds could be much better resolved on the amylose carbamate-modified cage-like CSP while the cage-like stationary phase without amylose derivative showed weak enantiomer separation performance. New materials may open new avenues for separations and a considerable attention has been recently paid to covalent organic frameworks (COFs), which are porous crystal materials consisting of multiple, organic, small-molecule monomers connected by reversible covalent bonds. Chiral COFs for chiral separation are typically immobilized on silica gel. Such type of composite material has been proposed by Wang, Xie, and coworkers [<span>8</span>]. A chiral core–shell composite material was prepared by stirring 2,4,6-trihydroxybenzene-1,3,5-tricarbaldehyde, 2,5-diaminopyridine, (<i>S</i>)-2-methylpyrrolidine and 3-aminopropylsilica at room temperature for 7 days in dichloromethane (see Figure 1). A comparison of powder x-ray diffraction patterns, FT-IR spectra, and SEM images (Figure 1) of chiral COF material immobilized to silica, aminopropyl silica, and chiral COF material (not immobilized) indicated the successful surface modification. The chiral COF composite material could separate the enantiomers of structurally different chiral compounds under normal-phase conditions. Another article of the collection reviewed the synthesis approaches of COF materials and their utility in separation science with specific focus on biomedical applications [<span>9</span>]. Their exciting features such as chemical diversity from various covalently linked organic building blocks, high surface coverage through their nanoporous structures, and tunable porosity have raised great attention of material and separation scientists. Synthesis and chemical structures like dedicated applications are manifold and the review by Nala, Gajula, and coworkers gives a good overview of some recent trends.</p><p>During drug discovery, new drug candidates are subjected to numerous in vitro characterization methodologies. Among others, the lipophilicity of new drug candidates is experimentally determined as it can influence the distribution within the body. One concept that has become popular and reached experimental practicality is immobilized artificial membrane (IAM) chromatography, where phospholipid membranes immobilized onto silica mimic biological interactions to simulate the transport across membranes. This chromatographic mode has the advantage of ease of automation, is connected to little compound consumption, and produces minimal waste. In one work from this collection, a new IAM phase prepared by copolymerization of 2-methylacryloxydodecyl phosphatidylserine (MDPS) with ethylenedimethacrylate (EDMA) was prepared in capillary format for nano-high-performance liquid chromatography (nHPLC) to predict the permeability for the blood–brain barrier [<span>10</span>]. This PS-mimicking phospholipid membrane polymer monolithic column showed decent correlations with correlation coefficient of 0.73 between log BB (of compounds with known blood–brain permeability) and the CHI IAM at pH 7.4 as measured with the poly(MPS-co-EDMA) monolith, potentially useful for a first quick estimation of the blood–brain barrier. Kubo and coworkers took a closer look into the retention and selectivity characteristics of fluorous affinity chromatography [<span>11</span>]. A fluoroalkyl-modified silica gel column was synthesized and the retention of polyfluoroalkyl substances was investigated and compared to a corresponding alkyl-silica phase without fluorine substitution. It was found that retention of fluorine compounds increased with their number of fluorine atoms on the fluorine-containing stationary phase, while all nonfluorine compounds were not retained. The binding increments of fluorous affinity were essentially established on the new stationary phase and compared to a commercial fluorous alkyl stationary phase (Fluofix-II). It could be demonstrated that the new fluorinated column showed higher retention of fluorinated compounds compared to the tested commercially available fluorinated column.</p><p>Several articles reported the synthesis and application of new ion-exchange or mixed-mode ion-exchange materials. Huang et al. described the synthesis of monodisperse PS-DVB microspheres as stationary phase matrix which was activated by Friedel–Crafts acylation with chloroacetylchloride followed by nucleophilic substitution functionalization using mercaptosuccinic acid as well as further modification of the remaining double bonds on the beads by thiol-ene click reaction with mercaptosuccinic acid to increase the capacity of the new weak cation exchange resins [<span>12</span>]. Six common cations (Li<sup>+</sup>, Na<sup>+</sup>, NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup>, K<sup>+</sup>, Mg<sup>2+</sup>, and Ca<sup>2+</sup>) could be separated within 25 min. Liu and coworkers utilized COF technology to construct a poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) based anion-exchanger for the separation of conventional anions, organic acids, and carbohydrates [<span>13</span>]. Thus, poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) microspheres were loaded with p-phenylenediamine-1,3,5-triformylphloroglucinol derived nanoparticles constructed by an in situ growth method. The imine groups were then reduced to amino groups and subsequently quaternized. The well-characterized COF-based anion-exchanger microspheres showed good selectivity for the above-mentioned analytes and excellent stability. The same group proposed another chemistry to prepare an organic polymer-based anion exchanger by curing reaction of triglycidyl isocyanate with triethylenetetramine on the surface of PS-DVB microspheres [<span>14</span>]. Since mere PS beads have low chemical reactivity for further surface modification, a crosslinking surface functionalization affording a polymer network on top of the silica beads was found a viable option to generate high capacity anion-exchanger beads. Following the above network formation, the available amino groups on the beads were quaternized and then successfully tested for the separation of inorganic anions, organic acids, and carbohydrates.</p><p>Mixed-mode reversed-phase/anion-exchange type stationary phases were also in the focus of the special collection. Wolter et al. developed a series of mixed-mode stationary phases obtained by either immobilizing triphenylallylsilane or 2-propinyl-triphenylphosphonium bromide onto thiol-silica by thiol-ene click reaction, leading to triphenyl-type and triphenylphosphonium-type mixed-mode phases [<span>15</span>]. The latter stationary phase was oxidized with performic acid affording sulfonic acid moieties of the residual thiol groups on the modified silica surface giving this material a zwitterionic character. Zeta potential measurements clearly showed a distinct surface charge character of the three mixed-mode stationary phases and hence complementarity in retention and selectivity profiles to each other and commercial and in-house benchmarking stationary phases. The triphenylphosphonium SAX stationary phase was found to be particularly interesting for oligonucleotide separations, for example, for siRNA Patisiran. The double-tethered surface bonding of this phase makes it more stable and compatible with biochromatography conditions such as high salt in ion-exchange type separations. The great potential of mixed-mode chromatography in challenging separations was outlined in an article on the separation of glucosinolates, which are a group of secondary metabolites in <i>Brassica</i> vegetables [<span>16</span>]. Due to their anionic form, structural diversities, and coexistence of other phenolic compounds, their separation represented a significant challenge on common RP type columns. Using a commercial BEH C18 AX column versus a conventional C18 column, it could be demonstrated that the optimized method for the mixed-mode column was applicable to the complex <i>Brassica</i> vegetable samples and could, in addition to the 17 well-resolved glucosinolate peaks, also separate 34 peaks for phenolic compounds which therefore could be identified in broccoli microgreen, suggesting the successful, better application scenarios for qualitative analysis in comparison with the single-mode reversed-phase C18 column.</p><p>With the increasing importance of biopharmaceuticals and new drug modalities with more complex structures than traditional drugs, new challenges arise for the characterization of their critical quality attributes. LC plays an important role, yet stationary phases often need adjustments in surface chemistries and morphology. Ke and coworkers developed a series of stationary phases for the fractionation of low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) with tailored pore size by pseudomorphic synthesis of pore size–tunable mesoporous silica spherical particles [<span>17</span>]. Spherical silica with narrow pore size distributions in the range of 40–80 Å could be obtained by a combination of quaternary ammonium cationic surfactants and different kinds of swelling agents, including polypropylene glycol, 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene, alkanes, and alkanols. Larger pore sizes in the range of 110–200 Å were obtained by using alkyl imidazolium ionic liquid surfactants as pore (size) tailoring agent under mild conditions. The materials were modified with diol chemistry and employed for the fraction of LMWHs by size-exclusion chromatography. Pore size is one of the key factors for the selectivity and performance in SEC. However, nonspecific adsorption may influence SEC performance. Actually, even after decades of optimization of diol-phases for SEC application, nonspecific interactions with silanols or hydrophobic patches on such materials could not be completely offset, as desired in this noninteractive chromatographic mode. However, recently researchers of Waters could make a major step forward with a new surface chemistry which they present in a research article of this special collection. Lauber and coworkers introduced a bridged ethylene polyethylene oxide (BE-PEO) surface chemistry to improve their packing materials for wide-pore size-exclusion chromatography [<span>18</span>]. In their work, a series of different BE-PEO surface-modified SEC materials were synthesized on 1000 Å, 3 µm silica particles by surface modification with a mixture of hydroxy(polyethyleneoxy)propyl]triethoxysilane (HO-PEO) and 1,2-bis(triethoxysilyl)ethane (BTEE) (see Figure 2). These trifunctional silanes can be attached to the surface and also crosslink between each other due to BTEE leading to a crosslinked polymeric network of ligands covalently bonded to the surface. The inertness of the bonded phase could be significantly improved due to fewer unreacted silanols exposed to the surface. The chromatographic performance of BE-PEO silica-packed columns was evaluated by separations of a protein test mixture, a DNA ladder, monoclonal antibody-based therapeutics, and adeno-associated viruses (AAVs).</p><p>With highly efficient modern UHPLC columns, detrimental effects from extra-column peak dispersion contributions and nonspecific interactions with metal frits and other stainless-steel column and system surfaces become visible, particularly in the form of peak tailing. Also, low recovery due to irreversible adsorption is sometimes a problem and requires preconditioning of the column and system with a representative sample prior to injection of the real study samples. Multiple vendors have introduced solutions to this problem by surface inactivation of column and system hardware with polymer coatings. Two studies of the special collection addressed this issue. In one study, multiple reversed-phase type columns (Accucore C18, CORTECS Shield RP18, Acquity HSS T3, Acquity Premier HSS T3, Accucore 150-C4, Accucore PFP, Synergi Polar RP, and Acclaim WCX-1) were screened for their performance in the analysis of corrosion inhibitors which are nasty molecules from chromatography perspective due to their sticky quaternary ammonium, imidazoline, and phosphoric ester functionalities [<span>19</span>]. From these experiments, it turned out that shielding of stationary phase silanols, for example, by trifunctional grafting of the Acquity HSS T3 stationary phase, and inactivation of column hardware surface, for example, as realized by Acquity Premier HSS T3, appeared to be promising strategies. The latter gave the best performance. Rudaz and coworkers demonstrated that the passivated hardware of a biphenyl stationary phase had clearly significant benefits in steroid analysis, in particular for sulfated and glucuronated steroids [<span>20</span>]. The peak asymmetry of sulfated species could be significantly reduced and was instrumental for the efficient simultaneous analysis of 52 steroids in plasma including their Phase II metabolites.</p><p>A number of papers in the special collection were related to challenges in the analysis of biomolecules and bioparticles. Bartolini, Sardella, and coworkers investigated different columns and uncommon nonaqueous reversed-phase (NARP) chromatography for the separation of vitamin D2 and D3 (one additional double bond and methyl group) [<span>21</span>]. The two, although not being isomers, are difficult to separate by common RPLC as the additional double-bond of D3 reduces the retention while the additional methyl group increases retention, leading to similar retention characteristics. The RP type stationary phases were evaluated which specifically differed in their hydrophobicity and silanophilic activity, including a GraceSmart RP C18 column without silanol endcapping, a Robusta RP C18 column with silanol endcapping, and a Waters Xbridge RP C18 column <i>with ethylene-bridged hybrid (BEH) particle technology</i>. The Xbridge C18 stationary phase exhibited the most favorable performance, leading to a resolution of 1.6 with the employed NARP allowing the use of LC-UV for the analysis. Pons and Marcus presented a method for the isolation of urinary extracellular vesicles (EVs) and exosomes, respectively, via hydrophobic interaction chromatography using a nylon-6 capillary-channeled polymer (C-CP) fiber column (see Figure 3) [<span>22</span>]. Exosomes, a subset of EVs in the size range of 30–150 nm, are of significant interest as sample material for biomedical applications such as diagnostic testing and therapeutic delivery. They can be isolated from various biofluids (urine, blood, and saliva) by techniques such as lengthy ultracentrifugation or SEC with limited selectivity and purity. Pons and Marcus suggest step-gradient hydrophobic interaction chromatography method with nylon-6 C-CP fiber column as isolation technique. It provided increased isolation efficiency, higher loading capacity, and more gentle EV elution. Various characterization methods confirmed the quality of the isolated exosomes and the method turned out to be a low-cost and time-efficient (&lt; 20 min) method (Figure 3). In another study of bioparticle separations, Černigoj and coworkers reported on the column reproducibility of a quaternary amine (QA) chromatographic monolithic column, also in the course of upscaling, for AAV viral vector manufacturing using linear potassium chloride (KCl) gradient for elution [<span>23</span>]. A key challenge in this field is the separation of full AAV capsids from undesired nonfunctional (empty, partially filled, etc.) capsids. Since their separations are sensitive to even small changes of the stationary phase, the column reproducibility is of prime importance. In their work, the authors demonstrated the high quality of their monolithic column and excellent repeatability.</p><p>This special collection of trends in stationary phases and column technology is a nice representative cross-section of current technologies and innovations from the leading groups on stationary phase synthesis and column technology development. Their contributions are highly appreciated.</p>","PeriodicalId":17098,"journal":{"name":"Journal of separation science","volume":"48 7","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-07-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/jssc.70215","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Trends in Stationary Phases and Column Technologies\",\"authors\":\"Michael Lämmerhofer\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/jssc.70215\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Chromatography and column technology have undergone significant developments over the past two decades. Highly efficient small sub-2 µm particles and core–shell particle columns have become the new state-of-the-art in liquid chromatography (LC), with applications ranging from pharmaceutical and food analysis to environmental and forensic sciences, and bioanalysis including omics technologies (metabolomics, lipidomics, and proteomics). Peak widths of a few seconds can be achieved and run times with short columns are significantly reduced. Other chromatographic modes besides reversed-phase LC (RPLC), the standard workhorse in (U)HPLC, have found also broader adoption and application in many fields. In short, LC stationary phase technology has become more diverse. A driving force for new developments is new application fields which need new column technologies, like new drug modalities, challenges in environmental and bioanalysis, and new demands to characterize bioparticles like viruses, virus-like particles, microvesicles, and lipid-emulsion formulations. Short monolithic columns are often employed for (bio)particle separations. In many of these application fields, columns with deactivated column hardware surface have shown improved recoveries and reduced peak tailing, which lead to better detection sensitivity. These trends are reflected by the articles submitted to the special collection “<i>Stationary phases and column technologies</i>,” an entirely digital special issue, which was collecting invited articles over the period from April to September 2024. The contents and major ideas of the articles are briefly summarized below.</p><p>Multiple papers of this special collection refer to the development of stationary phases for hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC). HILIC stationary phases are typically based on silica with polar-modified surface chemistries. In one work, Zhao and coworkers synthesized a novel zwitterionic polymer grafted silica stationary phase by bonding poly(ethylene maleic anhydride) molecules on the surface of aminopropyl silica via multiple binding sites, followed by ammonolysis of remaining maleic anhydride groups through a nucleophilic substitution reaction with ethylenediamine [<span>1</span>]. The zwitterionic character resulted from carboxylic groups and primary amine groups. Zeta-potential measurements showed a charge reversal at about pH 5.5 from a positive surface charge below to negative surface charge above this isoelectric point of the material. Retention models were evaluated and thermodynamic analysis was employed to get a closer look into the retention mechanism. Nucleosides and nucleic bases, sugars, and Amadori products were successfully separated under HILIC conditions. Polymer particles are less commonly employed as support materials for HILIC columns as they have a hydrophobic character and a tendency to swell in organic solvents. In an article by Yang and coworkers, the high hydrophobicity and chemical inertness of poly(styrene-divinylbenzene) (PS-DVB) microspheres were overcome by grafting of an acrylamide-terminated lysine zwitterionic monomer onto the PS-DVB beads by free-radical polymerization to afford a polar stationary phase suitable for HILIC [<span>2</span>]. The modified beads showed zwitterionic surface chemistry originating from the α-amino group and carboxylic acid functionalities of lysine, which was polymerized and bonded via the ε-amino moiety through an acrylamide monomer. The authors characterized the stationary phase by the Tanaka HILIC test and compared the characteristics with multiple commercial HILIC phases. Column bleeding was also compared to commercial phases and was found to be significantly less than multiple brush-type HILIC phases. The new stationary phase showed a good performance for the HILIC separation of saccharides. Liang, Ke, and coworkers prepared low swelling and high mechanical strength organosilane hybrid polydivinylbenzene microspheres for hydrophilic interaction chromatography applications [<span>3</span>]. The driving force for this work was to overcome limitations of low-bleed HILIC stationary phases based on polymer matrices, which, due to the high content of the organic phase in the HILIC mobile phase, exhibit typically some swelling of the polymer matrix. A seed swelling polymerization approach with polystyrene latices as templates and divinylbenzene, as well as 3-methacryloxypropyltrimethoxysilane as monomers was employed to synthesize monodispersed beads. During this polymerization process of the beads, new crosslink bridges can be formed due to the methoxysilane moieties by condensation reaction, besides the radical polymerization of the DVB monomer. The increase in the degree of crosslinking was found conducive to the improvement of the resistance to swelling as well as to the mechanical strength of the microspheres. HILIC surface characteristics were introduced by a radical-addition reaction of cysteine via thiol-ene click reaction leading to zwitterionic surface. The stationary phase was compared to a formerly prepared Cys-clicked silica phase (ClickXIon) and found comparable in the majority of chromatographic properties. Another study addressed the screening of a number of commercial (silica, amide, and sulfobetaine) HILIC and RP columns to find proper conditions for the analysis of di- and tripeptides adducted with mustard agents originating from their reaction with albumin [<span>4</span>]. The goal was to develop an analytical LC-MS/MS assay that can be used to monitor retrospectively the exposure to mustard agents. Finally, a zwitterionic sulfobetaine type ZIC-HILIC column was selected for the HILIC and RP with C18 phase for RPLC analysis of an adducted tripeptide corresponding to adduct on Cys34 (of human albumin) to allow their complementary analysis in the low ng/mL concentration range as a marker of exposure to mustard agents.</p><p>A group of papers focused on new developments of chiral stationary phases (CSPs) for enantiomer separation. In one study, a chiral monolithic capillary column was synthesized by post-modification of an in situ prepared poly(glycidylmethacrylate-co-ethylene dimethacrylate) monolith with L-cysteine as chiral selector via ring-opening by nucleophilic substitution through nucleophilic attack of the epoxy group by the thiol of cysteine [<span>5</span>]. Dansyl amino acids could be successfully separated. Chiral macrocyclic compounds such as chiral crown ethers, cyclodextrins, and cyclofructans turned out to be successful chiral selectors in commercially available columns. Inspired by this class of macrocyclic structures, Yuan and coworkers presented a new CSP based on macrocyclic 1,1’-binaphthyl chiral polyimine [<span>6</span>]. Two molar equivalents each of axially chiral (<i>S</i>)-2,2’-dihydroxy-[1,1’-binaphthalene]-3,3’-dicarboxaldehyde and 1,2-phenylenediamine were reacted to an imine functionalized macrocyclic chiral compound. After introduction of an ether linkage with terminal ene group, it was immobilized to thiol silica via thiol-ene click reaction. The resultant CSP was evaluated in normal-phase and reversed-phase elution modes for its enantiomer separation capability which could be verified by full baseline separation of structurally diverse chiral compounds. Lv, Wang, and coworkers introduced a new composite material as CSP which was obtained by immobilization of reduced porous organic cages with homochiral secondary amine structure on silica gel, followed by coating of amylose tris(3,5-dimethylphenyl carbamate) [<span>7</span>]. The resultant material was carefully characterized by FT-IR (indicating the immobilized carbamate functionalities of the polysaccharide selector), elemental analysis (which confirmed the presence of nitrogen-containing cage and polysaccharide selector structures), nitrogen adsorption–desorption measurements (providing information on the specific surface area of 305 m<sup>2</sup>/g and pore size of 7.6 nm), thermogravimetric analysis (showing a significant weight loss between 100°C and 800°C of 18.8% which corresponds to the mass of the immobilized organic layer), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) (showing an increased surface roughness on the silica beads after surface modification). A number of structurally different chiral compounds could be much better resolved on the amylose carbamate-modified cage-like CSP while the cage-like stationary phase without amylose derivative showed weak enantiomer separation performance. New materials may open new avenues for separations and a considerable attention has been recently paid to covalent organic frameworks (COFs), which are porous crystal materials consisting of multiple, organic, small-molecule monomers connected by reversible covalent bonds. Chiral COFs for chiral separation are typically immobilized on silica gel. Such type of composite material has been proposed by Wang, Xie, and coworkers [<span>8</span>]. A chiral core–shell composite material was prepared by stirring 2,4,6-trihydroxybenzene-1,3,5-tricarbaldehyde, 2,5-diaminopyridine, (<i>S</i>)-2-methylpyrrolidine and 3-aminopropylsilica at room temperature for 7 days in dichloromethane (see Figure 1). A comparison of powder x-ray diffraction patterns, FT-IR spectra, and SEM images (Figure 1) of chiral COF material immobilized to silica, aminopropyl silica, and chiral COF material (not immobilized) indicated the successful surface modification. The chiral COF composite material could separate the enantiomers of structurally different chiral compounds under normal-phase conditions. Another article of the collection reviewed the synthesis approaches of COF materials and their utility in separation science with specific focus on biomedical applications [<span>9</span>]. Their exciting features such as chemical diversity from various covalently linked organic building blocks, high surface coverage through their nanoporous structures, and tunable porosity have raised great attention of material and separation scientists. Synthesis and chemical structures like dedicated applications are manifold and the review by Nala, Gajula, and coworkers gives a good overview of some recent trends.</p><p>During drug discovery, new drug candidates are subjected to numerous in vitro characterization methodologies. Among others, the lipophilicity of new drug candidates is experimentally determined as it can influence the distribution within the body. One concept that has become popular and reached experimental practicality is immobilized artificial membrane (IAM) chromatography, where phospholipid membranes immobilized onto silica mimic biological interactions to simulate the transport across membranes. This chromatographic mode has the advantage of ease of automation, is connected to little compound consumption, and produces minimal waste. In one work from this collection, a new IAM phase prepared by copolymerization of 2-methylacryloxydodecyl phosphatidylserine (MDPS) with ethylenedimethacrylate (EDMA) was prepared in capillary format for nano-high-performance liquid chromatography (nHPLC) to predict the permeability for the blood–brain barrier [<span>10</span>]. This PS-mimicking phospholipid membrane polymer monolithic column showed decent correlations with correlation coefficient of 0.73 between log BB (of compounds with known blood–brain permeability) and the CHI IAM at pH 7.4 as measured with the poly(MPS-co-EDMA) monolith, potentially useful for a first quick estimation of the blood–brain barrier. Kubo and coworkers took a closer look into the retention and selectivity characteristics of fluorous affinity chromatography [<span>11</span>]. A fluoroalkyl-modified silica gel column was synthesized and the retention of polyfluoroalkyl substances was investigated and compared to a corresponding alkyl-silica phase without fluorine substitution. It was found that retention of fluorine compounds increased with their number of fluorine atoms on the fluorine-containing stationary phase, while all nonfluorine compounds were not retained. The binding increments of fluorous affinity were essentially established on the new stationary phase and compared to a commercial fluorous alkyl stationary phase (Fluofix-II). It could be demonstrated that the new fluorinated column showed higher retention of fluorinated compounds compared to the tested commercially available fluorinated column.</p><p>Several articles reported the synthesis and application of new ion-exchange or mixed-mode ion-exchange materials. Huang et al. described the synthesis of monodisperse PS-DVB microspheres as stationary phase matrix which was activated by Friedel–Crafts acylation with chloroacetylchloride followed by nucleophilic substitution functionalization using mercaptosuccinic acid as well as further modification of the remaining double bonds on the beads by thiol-ene click reaction with mercaptosuccinic acid to increase the capacity of the new weak cation exchange resins [<span>12</span>]. Six common cations (Li<sup>+</sup>, Na<sup>+</sup>, NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup>, K<sup>+</sup>, Mg<sup>2+</sup>, and Ca<sup>2+</sup>) could be separated within 25 min. Liu and coworkers utilized COF technology to construct a poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) based anion-exchanger for the separation of conventional anions, organic acids, and carbohydrates [<span>13</span>]. Thus, poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) microspheres were loaded with p-phenylenediamine-1,3,5-triformylphloroglucinol derived nanoparticles constructed by an in situ growth method. The imine groups were then reduced to amino groups and subsequently quaternized. The well-characterized COF-based anion-exchanger microspheres showed good selectivity for the above-mentioned analytes and excellent stability. The same group proposed another chemistry to prepare an organic polymer-based anion exchanger by curing reaction of triglycidyl isocyanate with triethylenetetramine on the surface of PS-DVB microspheres [<span>14</span>]. Since mere PS beads have low chemical reactivity for further surface modification, a crosslinking surface functionalization affording a polymer network on top of the silica beads was found a viable option to generate high capacity anion-exchanger beads. Following the above network formation, the available amino groups on the beads were quaternized and then successfully tested for the separation of inorganic anions, organic acids, and carbohydrates.</p><p>Mixed-mode reversed-phase/anion-exchange type stationary phases were also in the focus of the special collection. Wolter et al. developed a series of mixed-mode stationary phases obtained by either immobilizing triphenylallylsilane or 2-propinyl-triphenylphosphonium bromide onto thiol-silica by thiol-ene click reaction, leading to triphenyl-type and triphenylphosphonium-type mixed-mode phases [<span>15</span>]. The latter stationary phase was oxidized with performic acid affording sulfonic acid moieties of the residual thiol groups on the modified silica surface giving this material a zwitterionic character. Zeta potential measurements clearly showed a distinct surface charge character of the three mixed-mode stationary phases and hence complementarity in retention and selectivity profiles to each other and commercial and in-house benchmarking stationary phases. The triphenylphosphonium SAX stationary phase was found to be particularly interesting for oligonucleotide separations, for example, for siRNA Patisiran. The double-tethered surface bonding of this phase makes it more stable and compatible with biochromatography conditions such as high salt in ion-exchange type separations. The great potential of mixed-mode chromatography in challenging separations was outlined in an article on the separation of glucosinolates, which are a group of secondary metabolites in <i>Brassica</i> vegetables [<span>16</span>]. Due to their anionic form, structural diversities, and coexistence of other phenolic compounds, their separation represented a significant challenge on common RP type columns. Using a commercial BEH C18 AX column versus a conventional C18 column, it could be demonstrated that the optimized method for the mixed-mode column was applicable to the complex <i>Brassica</i> vegetable samples and could, in addition to the 17 well-resolved glucosinolate peaks, also separate 34 peaks for phenolic compounds which therefore could be identified in broccoli microgreen, suggesting the successful, better application scenarios for qualitative analysis in comparison with the single-mode reversed-phase C18 column.</p><p>With the increasing importance of biopharmaceuticals and new drug modalities with more complex structures than traditional drugs, new challenges arise for the characterization of their critical quality attributes. LC plays an important role, yet stationary phases often need adjustments in surface chemistries and morphology. Ke and coworkers developed a series of stationary phases for the fractionation of low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) with tailored pore size by pseudomorphic synthesis of pore size–tunable mesoporous silica spherical particles [<span>17</span>]. Spherical silica with narrow pore size distributions in the range of 40–80 Å could be obtained by a combination of quaternary ammonium cationic surfactants and different kinds of swelling agents, including polypropylene glycol, 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene, alkanes, and alkanols. Larger pore sizes in the range of 110–200 Å were obtained by using alkyl imidazolium ionic liquid surfactants as pore (size) tailoring agent under mild conditions. The materials were modified with diol chemistry and employed for the fraction of LMWHs by size-exclusion chromatography. Pore size is one of the key factors for the selectivity and performance in SEC. However, nonspecific adsorption may influence SEC performance. Actually, even after decades of optimization of diol-phases for SEC application, nonspecific interactions with silanols or hydrophobic patches on such materials could not be completely offset, as desired in this noninteractive chromatographic mode. However, recently researchers of Waters could make a major step forward with a new surface chemistry which they present in a research article of this special collection. Lauber and coworkers introduced a bridged ethylene polyethylene oxide (BE-PEO) surface chemistry to improve their packing materials for wide-pore size-exclusion chromatography [<span>18</span>]. In their work, a series of different BE-PEO surface-modified SEC materials were synthesized on 1000 Å, 3 µm silica particles by surface modification with a mixture of hydroxy(polyethyleneoxy)propyl]triethoxysilane (HO-PEO) and 1,2-bis(triethoxysilyl)ethane (BTEE) (see Figure 2). These trifunctional silanes can be attached to the surface and also crosslink between each other due to BTEE leading to a crosslinked polymeric network of ligands covalently bonded to the surface. The inertness of the bonded phase could be significantly improved due to fewer unreacted silanols exposed to the surface. The chromatographic performance of BE-PEO silica-packed columns was evaluated by separations of a protein test mixture, a DNA ladder, monoclonal antibody-based therapeutics, and adeno-associated viruses (AAVs).</p><p>With highly efficient modern UHPLC columns, detrimental effects from extra-column peak dispersion contributions and nonspecific interactions with metal frits and other stainless-steel column and system surfaces become visible, particularly in the form of peak tailing. Also, low recovery due to irreversible adsorption is sometimes a problem and requires preconditioning of the column and system with a representative sample prior to injection of the real study samples. Multiple vendors have introduced solutions to this problem by surface inactivation of column and system hardware with polymer coatings. Two studies of the special collection addressed this issue. In one study, multiple reversed-phase type columns (Accucore C18, CORTECS Shield RP18, Acquity HSS T3, Acquity Premier HSS T3, Accucore 150-C4, Accucore PFP, Synergi Polar RP, and Acclaim WCX-1) were screened for their performance in the analysis of corrosion inhibitors which are nasty molecules from chromatography perspective due to their sticky quaternary ammonium, imidazoline, and phosphoric ester functionalities [<span>19</span>]. From these experiments, it turned out that shielding of stationary phase silanols, for example, by trifunctional grafting of the Acquity HSS T3 stationary phase, and inactivation of column hardware surface, for example, as realized by Acquity Premier HSS T3, appeared to be promising strategies. The latter gave the best performance. Rudaz and coworkers demonstrated that the passivated hardware of a biphenyl stationary phase had clearly significant benefits in steroid analysis, in particular for sulfated and glucuronated steroids [<span>20</span>]. The peak asymmetry of sulfated species could be significantly reduced and was instrumental for the efficient simultaneous analysis of 52 steroids in plasma including their Phase II metabolites.</p><p>A number of papers in the special collection were related to challenges in the analysis of biomolecules and bioparticles. Bartolini, Sardella, and coworkers investigated different columns and uncommon nonaqueous reversed-phase (NARP) chromatography for the separation of vitamin D2 and D3 (one additional double bond and methyl group) [<span>21</span>]. The two, although not being isomers, are difficult to separate by common RPLC as the additional double-bond of D3 reduces the retention while the additional methyl group increases retention, leading to similar retention characteristics. The RP type stationary phases were evaluated which specifically differed in their hydrophobicity and silanophilic activity, including a GraceSmart RP C18 column without silanol endcapping, a Robusta RP C18 column with silanol endcapping, and a Waters Xbridge RP C18 column <i>with ethylene-bridged hybrid (BEH) particle technology</i>. The Xbridge C18 stationary phase exhibited the most favorable performance, leading to a resolution of 1.6 with the employed NARP allowing the use of LC-UV for the analysis. Pons and Marcus presented a method for the isolation of urinary extracellular vesicles (EVs) and exosomes, respectively, via hydrophobic interaction chromatography using a nylon-6 capillary-channeled polymer (C-CP) fiber column (see Figure 3) [<span>22</span>]. Exosomes, a subset of EVs in the size range of 30–150 nm, are of significant interest as sample material for biomedical applications such as diagnostic testing and therapeutic delivery. They can be isolated from various biofluids (urine, blood, and saliva) by techniques such as lengthy ultracentrifugation or SEC with limited selectivity and purity. Pons and Marcus suggest step-gradient hydrophobic interaction chromatography method with nylon-6 C-CP fiber column as isolation technique. It provided increased isolation efficiency, higher loading capacity, and more gentle EV elution. Various characterization methods confirmed the quality of the isolated exosomes and the method turned out to be a low-cost and time-efficient (&lt; 20 min) method (Figure 3). In another study of bioparticle separations, Černigoj and coworkers reported on the column reproducibility of a quaternary amine (QA) chromatographic monolithic column, also in the course of upscaling, for AAV viral vector manufacturing using linear potassium chloride (KCl) gradient for elution [<span>23</span>]. A key challenge in this field is the separation of full AAV capsids from undesired nonfunctional (empty, partially filled, etc.) capsids. Since their separations are sensitive to even small changes of the stationary phase, the column reproducibility is of prime importance. In their work, the authors demonstrated the high quality of their monolithic column and excellent repeatability.</p><p>This special collection of trends in stationary phases and column technology is a nice representative cross-section of current technologies and innovations from the leading groups on stationary phase synthesis and column technology development. Their contributions are highly appreciated.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":17098,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of separation science\",\"volume\":\"48 7\",\"pages\":\"\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.8000,\"publicationDate\":\"2025-07-15\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/jssc.70215\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of separation science\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"5\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://analyticalsciencejournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jssc.70215\",\"RegionNum\":3,\"RegionCategory\":\"工程技术\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of separation science","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://analyticalsciencejournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jssc.70215","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的二十年里,色谱和色谱柱技术经历了重大的发展。高效的小于2微米的小颗粒和核壳颗粒柱已成为液相色谱(LC)的最新技术,应用范围从制药和食品分析到环境和法医科学,以及生物分析包括组学技术(代谢组学,脂质组学和蛋白质组学)。可以实现几秒钟的峰值宽度,并且短列的运行时间大大减少。除反相LC (RPLC)外,其他色谱模式也在许多领域得到了广泛的采用和应用。总之,LC固定相技术变得更加多样化。新发展的驱动力是需要新色谱柱技术的新应用领域,如新的药物模式,环境和生物分析方面的挑战,以及表征生物颗粒(如病毒、病毒样颗粒、微囊泡和脂质乳液配方)的新需求。短整体柱通常用于(生物)颗粒分离。在这些应用领域中,采用非活性柱体硬件表面的柱体显示出更高的回收率和更少的峰值尾迹,从而提高了检测灵敏度。2024年4月至9月期间,在全数字化特刊《固定相和柱技术》特刊上发表的文章反映了这些趋势。文章的内容和主要思想简述如下。本特辑的多篇论文涉及亲水相互作用液相色谱(HILIC)固定相的发展。HILIC固定相通常是基于具有极性修饰表面化学的二氧化硅。在一项研究中,Zhao及其同事通过多个结合位点在氨丙基二氧化硅表面结合聚马来酸酐(乙烯)分子,合成了一种新型两性离子聚合物接枝二氧化硅固定相,然后通过与乙二胺[1]的亲核取代反应将剩余的马来酸酐基团氨解。两性离子性质是由羧基和伯胺基引起的。zeta电位测量显示,在pH约5.5时,从低于该材料等电点的表面正电荷到高于该材料等电点的表面负电荷发生了电荷反转。采用热力学分析方法对其保留机理进行了深入研究。在HILIC条件下成功地分离了核苷和核酸基、糖和Amadori产物。聚合物颗粒很少被用作HILIC柱的支撑材料,因为它们具有疏水性和在有机溶剂中膨胀的倾向。在Yang及其同事的一篇文章中,通过自由基聚合将端部为丙烯酰胺的赖氨酸两性离子单体接枝到PS-DVB微球上,克服了PS-DVB微球的高疏水性和化学惰性,获得了适合于HILIC[2]的极性固定相。通过丙烯酰胺单体将赖氨酸的α-氨基和羧酸官能团进行聚合和键合,显示出两性离子表面化学性质。采用Tanaka HILIC法对固定相进行了表征,并与多种商用HILIC相进行了特性比较。柱出血也与商业相比较,发现明显少于多个刷型HILIC相。该固定相对糖的HILIC分离具有良好的性能。Liang, Ke和同事制备了低膨胀和高机械强度的有机硅烷杂化聚乙烯苯微球,用于亲水性相互作用色谱应用[3]。这项工作的驱动力是克服基于聚合物基体的低流量HILIC固定相的局限性,由于HILIC流动相中有机相含量高,通常会出现聚合物基体的肿胀。以聚苯乙烯为模板剂,以二乙烯苯和3-甲基丙烯氧基丙基三甲氧基硅烷为单体,采用种子膨胀聚合法制备了单分散微球。在微球的聚合过程中,除了DVB单体的自由基聚合外,甲氧基硅烷基团还可以通过缩合反应形成新的交联桥。交联度的增加有利于提高微球的抗膨胀性和机械强度。 半胱氨酸自由基加成反应通过巯基点击反应生成两性离子表面,从而引入了HILIC的表面特征。将固定相与以前制备的cys -click二氧化硅相(ClickXIon)进行比较,发现大多数色谱性质具有可比性。另一项研究涉及筛选一些商业(二氧化硅,酰胺和磺胺甜菜碱)HILIC和RP色谱柱,以找到合适的条件来分析由与白蛋白[4]反应产生的芥菜剂内合的二肽和三肽。目的是开发一种可用于回顾性监测芥菜剂暴露的LC-MS/MS分析方法。最后,选择两性离子磺胺基甜菜碱型ZIC-HILIC色谱柱进行HILIC和C18相RP色谱柱进行RPLC分析,对与Cys34(人白蛋白)上加合物相对应的加合三肽进行互补分析,在低ng/mL浓度范围内作为芥菜剂暴露的标志。介绍了手性固定相(CSPs)分离对映体的新进展。在一项研究中,以l -半胱氨酸为手性选择剂,通过亲核取代,通过半胱氨酸的硫醇[5]亲核攻击环氧基,对原位制备的聚甲基丙烯酸甘油酯-二甲基丙烯酸乙酯单体进行开环后改性,合成了手性整体毛细管柱。丹酰氨基酸可以成功分离。手性大环化合物,如手性冠醚,环糊精和环果聚糖被证明是成功的手性选择剂,在商业上可用的色谱柱。受这类大环结构的启发,Yuan和同事提出了一种基于大环1,1 ' -联萘基手性聚酰亚胺[6]的新型CSP。两个摩尔当量的轴向手性(S)-2,2 ' -二羟基-[1,1 ' -联萘]-3,3 ' -二甲醛和1,2-苯二胺反应得到了一个亚胺功能化的大环手性化合物。引入末端烯基团的醚键后,通过巯基咔嗒反应将其固定在硅硫醚上。在正相和反相洗脱模式下对CSP的对映体分离能力进行了评估,并通过对结构各异的手性化合物的完全基线分离来验证。Lv, Wang等介绍了一种新的复合材料CSP,该材料是通过将具有同手性仲胺结构的还原多孔有机笼固定在硅胶上,然后涂覆直链淀粉三(3,5-二甲基苯基氨基甲酸酯)[7]得到的。通过FT-IR(表明多糖选择器的固定氨基甲酸酯功能)、元素分析(证实了含氮笼和多糖选择器结构的存在)、氮吸附-解吸测量(提供了比表面积为305 m2/g和孔径为7.6 nm的信息)、热重分析(显示在100°C和800°C之间,固定有机层的质量减少了18.8%)和扫描电子显微镜(SEM)(显示表面改性后二氧化硅珠的表面粗糙度增加)。氨基甲酸直链淀粉修饰的笼状固定相可以较好地分离许多结构不同的手性化合物,而不含直链淀粉衍生物的笼状固定相对映体的分离性能较弱。新材料可能为分离开辟新的途径,近年来人们非常关注共价有机框架(COFs),它是由多个有机小分子单体通过可逆共价键连接而成的多孔晶体材料。用于手性分离的手性COFs通常固定在硅胶上。这种类型的复合材料是由Wang, Xie和同事[8]提出的。将2,4,6-三羟基苯-1,3,5-三乙醛、2,5-二氨基吡啶、(S)-2-甲基吡咯烷和3-氨基丙基二氧化硅在二氯甲烷中室温搅拌7天,制备手性核壳复合材料(见图1)。将手性COF材料固定于二氧化硅、氨基丙基二氧化硅和未固定的手性COF材料的粉末x射线衍射图、FT-IR光谱和SEM图像(图1)进行比较,表明表面改性成功。手性COF复合材料可以在正相条件下分离结构不同的手性化合物的对映体。该系列的另一篇文章综述了COF材料的合成方法及其在分离科学中的应用,并特别关注生物医学应用[b]。 它们令人兴奋的特性,如来自各种共价连接的有机构建块的化学多样性,通过其纳米孔结构的高表面覆盖率,以及可调节的孔隙率等,引起了材料和分离科学家的高度关注。像专用应用程序这样的合成和化学结构是多种多样的,Nala、Gajula和同事们的综述很好地概述了一些最近的趋势。在药物发现过程中,新的候选药物受到许多体外表征方法的影响。其中,新候选药物的亲脂性是通过实验确定的,因为它可以影响体内的分布。固定化人工膜(IAM)色谱法是一种已经流行并具有实验实用性的概念,其中固定在二氧化硅上的磷脂膜模拟生物相互作用来模拟跨膜运输。这种色谱方式的优点是易于自动化,与很少的化合物消耗相连接,并且产生最小的浪费。在该系列的一项工作中,通过2-甲基丙烯氧基十二烷基磷脂酰丝氨酸(MDPS)与乙二甲基丙烯酸酯(EDMA)共聚制备了一种新的IAM相,以毛细管形式用于纳米高效液相色谱(nHPLC)预测血脑屏障[10]的通透性。这种模拟ps的磷脂膜聚合物整体柱在logbb(已知血脑通透性的化合物)和CHI IAM (pH 7.4)之间显示出良好的相关系数0.73,这是用聚(MPS-co-EDMA)整体柱测量的,可能对血脑屏障的第一次快速估计有用。Kubo和同事仔细研究了氟亲和色谱[11]的保留和选择性特性。合成了一种氟烷基改性硅胶柱,研究了多氟烷基物质的保留率,并与未氟取代的相应烷基硅相进行了比较。结果发现,氟化合物在含氟固定相上的保留随其氟原子数目的增加而增加,而所有非氟化合物都不保留。氟亲和的结合增量基本上建立在新的固定相上,并与商业含氟烷基固定相(Fluofix-II)进行比较。可以证明,与经测试的市售氟化柱相比,新的氟化柱具有更高的氟化化合物保留率。一些文章报道了新型离子交换或混合模式离子交换材料的合成和应用。Huang等人描述了单分散PS-DVB微球作为固定相基质的合成,该固定相基质先用氯乙酰氯进行Friedel-Crafts酰化活化,然后用巯基琥珀酸进行亲核取代功能化,再用巯基琥珀酸对珠上剩余的双键进行进一步修饰,以增加新的弱阳离子交换树脂[12]的容量。6种常见阳离子(Li+, Na+, NH4+, K+, Mg2+和Ca2+)在25 min内可以分离。Liu和同事利用COF技术构建了一种基于聚苯乙烯-共二乙烯基苯的阴离子交换剂,用于分离常规阴离子、有机酸和碳水化合物[13]。因此,聚苯乙烯-共二乙烯基苯微球负载了通过原位生长方法构建的对苯二胺-1,3,5-三甲酰基间苯三醇衍生纳米颗粒。然后亚胺基被还原为氨基,随后被季铵化。表征良好的cof基阴离子交换微球对上述分析物具有良好的选择性和良好的稳定性。在PS-DVB微球[14]表面,采用异氰酸三甘油酯与三乙基四胺固化反应制备有机聚合物基阴离子交换剂。由于PS珠具有较低的化学反应性,无法进行进一步的表面改性,因此在二氧化硅珠上进行交联表面功能化,形成聚合物网络,是产生高容量阴离子交换珠的可行选择。在上述网络形成之后,珠子上的可用氨基被季铵化,然后成功地测试了无机阴离子、有机酸和碳水化合物的分离。混合模式反相/阴离子交换型固定相也是特别收集的重点。Wolter等人开发了一系列混合模式固定相,通过巯基点击反应将三苯基烯基硅烷或2-丙基-三苯基溴化磷固定在硫醇-二氧化硅上,得到三苯基型和三苯基磷型混合模式相[15]。 后一固定相被甲酸氧化,使改性二氧化硅表面的残巯基形成磺酸基团,使该材料具有两性离子性质。Zeta电位测量清楚地显示了三种混合模式固定相的明显表面电荷特征,因此在保留和选择性方面具有互补性,彼此之间以及商业和内部基准固定相。三苯基膦SAX固定相被发现对寡核苷酸分离特别有趣,例如siRNA Patisiran。该相的双系绳表面键合使其更稳定,并与离子交换型分离中的高盐等生物色谱条件兼容。本文概述了混合模式色谱法在分离芥子油苷(Brassica vegetables[16]中一组次级代谢产物)方面的巨大潜力。由于它们的阴离子形式、结构多样性和其他酚类化合物的共存,它们的分离对普通RP型柱来说是一个重大挑战。利用商业BEH C18 AX色谱柱与传统C18色谱柱对比,结果表明,混合模式色谱柱优化方法适用于复杂的芸苔菜样品,除了能分离出17个硫代葡萄糖苷峰外,还能分离出34个酚类化合物峰,因此可以在西兰花微绿中进行鉴定。与单模反相C18色谱柱相比,具有更好的定性分析应用场景。随着生物制药和比传统药物结构更复杂的新药物模式的重要性日益增加,对其关键质量属性的表征提出了新的挑战。LC起着重要的作用,但固定相通常需要在表面化学和形态上进行调整。Ke和同事开发了一系列固定相,通过假晶合成孔径可调的介孔二氧化硅球形颗粒[17],用于分离具有定制孔径的低分子量肝素(LMWH)。季铵盐阳离子表面活性剂与聚丙烯乙二醇、1,3,5-三甲基苯、烷烃、烷醇等不同类型的膨胀剂结合,可以得到孔径分布在40-80 Å范围内的球形二氧化硅。以烷基咪唑类离子液体表面活性剂为孔径裁剪剂,在温和条件下可获得较大孔径110 ~ 200 Å。用二醇化学法对材料进行了改性,并采用排粒径色谱法对低分子硫化物进行了分离。孔径大小是影响吸附性能和选择性的关键因素之一,但非特异性吸附会影响吸附性能。实际上,即使经过数十年的优化,用于SEC应用的二醇相,与硅烷醇或疏水性斑块在这些材料上的非特异性相互作用也不能完全抵消,正如在这种非相互作用色谱模式中所期望的那样。然而,最近沃特斯的研究人员在一篇特别的研究文章中展示了一种新的表面化学,他们在这方面取得了重大进展。Lauber和同事引入了桥接聚乙烯氧化物(BE-PEO)表面化学,以改进其用于大孔径排阻色谱的包装材料。在他们的工作中,通过用羟基(聚乙烯氧基)丙基]三乙氧基硅烷(HO-PEO)和1,2-二(三乙氧基)乙烷(BTEE)的混合物进行表面改性,在1000 Å, 3µm二氧化硅颗粒上合成了一系列不同的BE-PEO表面改性的SEC材料(见图2)。这些三功能硅烷可以附着在表面上,也可以通过BTEE相互交联,从而形成与表面共价结合的配体交联聚合物网络。由于暴露在表面的未反应硅烷醇较少,键合相的惰性可以显著改善。通过分离蛋白质测试混合物、DNA阶梯、基于单克隆抗体的疗法和腺相关病毒(aav)来评估BE-PEO二氧化硅填充柱的色谱性能。使用高效的现代UHPLC色谱柱,柱外峰分散贡献和与金属块和其他不锈钢柱和系统表面的非特异性相互作用的有害影响变得可见,特别是以峰尾的形式。此外,由于不可逆吸附导致的低回收率有时也是一个问题,需要在注入实际研究样品之前用代表性样品对柱和系统进行预处理。多家供应商已经推出了解决方案,通过聚合物涂层对色谱柱和系统硬件进行表面失活。 两项关于特别收藏的研究解决了这个问题。在一项研究中,对多个反相型色谱柱(Accucore C18、CORTECS Shield RP18、Acquity HSS T3、Acquity Premier HSS T3、Accucore 150-C4、Accucore PFP、Synergi Polar RP和Acclaim WCX-1)在分析缓蚀剂中的性能进行了筛选。从色谱角度来看,缓蚀剂由于具有黏性季铵、咪唑啉和磷酸酯的功能,从色谱角度来看是讨厌的分子。从这些实验中发现,Acquity Premier HSS T3实现的固定相硅烷醇屏蔽(例如通过三功能接枝Acquity HSS T3固定相)和柱硬件表面失活(例如通过Acquity Premier HSS T3实现)似乎是有前途的策略。后者的表现最好。Rudaz和同事证明了联苯固定相的钝化硬件在类固醇分析中具有明显的优势,特别是对于硫酸和葡萄糖醛酸类固醇[20]。硫酸盐酸化物种的峰不对称性可以显著降低,并有助于有效地同时分析血浆中52种类固醇及其II期代谢物。特别收藏的一些论文与生物分子和生物颗粒分析中的挑战有关。Bartolini, Sardella和同事研究了不同色谱柱和非水反相(NARP)色谱法分离维生素D2和D3(一个额外的双键和甲基)[21]。两者虽然不是同分异构体,但由于D3的额外双键减少了保留,而额外的甲基增加了保留,因此很难用普通RPLC分离,导致相似的保留特性。对RP型固定相的疏水性和亲硅活性进行了评估,包括不带硅醇端盖的GraceSmart RP C18柱、带硅醇端盖的Robusta RP C18柱和带乙烯桥杂化(BEH)颗粒技术的Waters Xbridge RP C18柱。Xbridge C18固定相表现出最有利的性能,采用的NARP分辨率为1.6,允许使用LC-UV进行分析。Pons和Marcus提出了一种分离尿液细胞外囊泡(EVs)和外泌体的方法,分别使用尼龙-6毛细管通道聚合物(C-CP)纤维柱通过疏水相互作用层析(见图3)[22]。外泌体是ev的一个子集,尺寸范围在30 - 150nm之间,作为生物医学应用的样品材料,如诊断测试和治疗递送,具有重要的意义。它们可以通过长时间的超离心或SEC等技术从各种生物流体(尿液、血液和唾液)中分离出来,但选择性和纯度有限。Pons和Marcus提出了以尼龙- 6c - cp纤维柱为分离技术的阶梯梯度疏水相互作用色谱法。它提供了更高的隔离效率,更高的负载能力,更温和的EV洗脱。各种表征方法证实了分离的外泌体的质量,该方法被证明是一种低成本和高效率的方法(&lt; 20分钟)(图3)。在另一项生物颗粒分离研究中,Černigoj和同事报道了季胺(QA)色谱整体柱的柱重现性,同样在升级过程中,用于AAV病毒载体制造,使用线性氯化钾(KCl)梯度洗脱[23]。该领域的一个关键挑战是将完整的AAV衣壳与不需要的非功能(空的、部分填充的等)衣壳分离开来。由于它们的分离对固定相的微小变化都很敏感,因此柱的重现性是最重要的。在他们的工作中,作者证明了他们的整体柱的高质量和出色的可重复性。这个特别的固定相和色谱柱技术发展趋势的集合是当前技术和来自固定相合成和色谱柱技术发展领导小组的创新的一个很好的代表性截面。我们高度赞赏他们的贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Trends in Stationary Phases and Column Technologies

Trends in Stationary Phases and Column Technologies

Trends in Stationary Phases and Column Technologies

Trends in Stationary Phases and Column Technologies

Chromatography and column technology have undergone significant developments over the past two decades. Highly efficient small sub-2 µm particles and core–shell particle columns have become the new state-of-the-art in liquid chromatography (LC), with applications ranging from pharmaceutical and food analysis to environmental and forensic sciences, and bioanalysis including omics technologies (metabolomics, lipidomics, and proteomics). Peak widths of a few seconds can be achieved and run times with short columns are significantly reduced. Other chromatographic modes besides reversed-phase LC (RPLC), the standard workhorse in (U)HPLC, have found also broader adoption and application in many fields. In short, LC stationary phase technology has become more diverse. A driving force for new developments is new application fields which need new column technologies, like new drug modalities, challenges in environmental and bioanalysis, and new demands to characterize bioparticles like viruses, virus-like particles, microvesicles, and lipid-emulsion formulations. Short monolithic columns are often employed for (bio)particle separations. In many of these application fields, columns with deactivated column hardware surface have shown improved recoveries and reduced peak tailing, which lead to better detection sensitivity. These trends are reflected by the articles submitted to the special collection “Stationary phases and column technologies,” an entirely digital special issue, which was collecting invited articles over the period from April to September 2024. The contents and major ideas of the articles are briefly summarized below.

Multiple papers of this special collection refer to the development of stationary phases for hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC). HILIC stationary phases are typically based on silica with polar-modified surface chemistries. In one work, Zhao and coworkers synthesized a novel zwitterionic polymer grafted silica stationary phase by bonding poly(ethylene maleic anhydride) molecules on the surface of aminopropyl silica via multiple binding sites, followed by ammonolysis of remaining maleic anhydride groups through a nucleophilic substitution reaction with ethylenediamine [1]. The zwitterionic character resulted from carboxylic groups and primary amine groups. Zeta-potential measurements showed a charge reversal at about pH 5.5 from a positive surface charge below to negative surface charge above this isoelectric point of the material. Retention models were evaluated and thermodynamic analysis was employed to get a closer look into the retention mechanism. Nucleosides and nucleic bases, sugars, and Amadori products were successfully separated under HILIC conditions. Polymer particles are less commonly employed as support materials for HILIC columns as they have a hydrophobic character and a tendency to swell in organic solvents. In an article by Yang and coworkers, the high hydrophobicity and chemical inertness of poly(styrene-divinylbenzene) (PS-DVB) microspheres were overcome by grafting of an acrylamide-terminated lysine zwitterionic monomer onto the PS-DVB beads by free-radical polymerization to afford a polar stationary phase suitable for HILIC [2]. The modified beads showed zwitterionic surface chemistry originating from the α-amino group and carboxylic acid functionalities of lysine, which was polymerized and bonded via the ε-amino moiety through an acrylamide monomer. The authors characterized the stationary phase by the Tanaka HILIC test and compared the characteristics with multiple commercial HILIC phases. Column bleeding was also compared to commercial phases and was found to be significantly less than multiple brush-type HILIC phases. The new stationary phase showed a good performance for the HILIC separation of saccharides. Liang, Ke, and coworkers prepared low swelling and high mechanical strength organosilane hybrid polydivinylbenzene microspheres for hydrophilic interaction chromatography applications [3]. The driving force for this work was to overcome limitations of low-bleed HILIC stationary phases based on polymer matrices, which, due to the high content of the organic phase in the HILIC mobile phase, exhibit typically some swelling of the polymer matrix. A seed swelling polymerization approach with polystyrene latices as templates and divinylbenzene, as well as 3-methacryloxypropyltrimethoxysilane as monomers was employed to synthesize monodispersed beads. During this polymerization process of the beads, new crosslink bridges can be formed due to the methoxysilane moieties by condensation reaction, besides the radical polymerization of the DVB monomer. The increase in the degree of crosslinking was found conducive to the improvement of the resistance to swelling as well as to the mechanical strength of the microspheres. HILIC surface characteristics were introduced by a radical-addition reaction of cysteine via thiol-ene click reaction leading to zwitterionic surface. The stationary phase was compared to a formerly prepared Cys-clicked silica phase (ClickXIon) and found comparable in the majority of chromatographic properties. Another study addressed the screening of a number of commercial (silica, amide, and sulfobetaine) HILIC and RP columns to find proper conditions for the analysis of di- and tripeptides adducted with mustard agents originating from their reaction with albumin [4]. The goal was to develop an analytical LC-MS/MS assay that can be used to monitor retrospectively the exposure to mustard agents. Finally, a zwitterionic sulfobetaine type ZIC-HILIC column was selected for the HILIC and RP with C18 phase for RPLC analysis of an adducted tripeptide corresponding to adduct on Cys34 (of human albumin) to allow their complementary analysis in the low ng/mL concentration range as a marker of exposure to mustard agents.

A group of papers focused on new developments of chiral stationary phases (CSPs) for enantiomer separation. In one study, a chiral monolithic capillary column was synthesized by post-modification of an in situ prepared poly(glycidylmethacrylate-co-ethylene dimethacrylate) monolith with L-cysteine as chiral selector via ring-opening by nucleophilic substitution through nucleophilic attack of the epoxy group by the thiol of cysteine [5]. Dansyl amino acids could be successfully separated. Chiral macrocyclic compounds such as chiral crown ethers, cyclodextrins, and cyclofructans turned out to be successful chiral selectors in commercially available columns. Inspired by this class of macrocyclic structures, Yuan and coworkers presented a new CSP based on macrocyclic 1,1’-binaphthyl chiral polyimine [6]. Two molar equivalents each of axially chiral (S)-2,2’-dihydroxy-[1,1’-binaphthalene]-3,3’-dicarboxaldehyde and 1,2-phenylenediamine were reacted to an imine functionalized macrocyclic chiral compound. After introduction of an ether linkage with terminal ene group, it was immobilized to thiol silica via thiol-ene click reaction. The resultant CSP was evaluated in normal-phase and reversed-phase elution modes for its enantiomer separation capability which could be verified by full baseline separation of structurally diverse chiral compounds. Lv, Wang, and coworkers introduced a new composite material as CSP which was obtained by immobilization of reduced porous organic cages with homochiral secondary amine structure on silica gel, followed by coating of amylose tris(3,5-dimethylphenyl carbamate) [7]. The resultant material was carefully characterized by FT-IR (indicating the immobilized carbamate functionalities of the polysaccharide selector), elemental analysis (which confirmed the presence of nitrogen-containing cage and polysaccharide selector structures), nitrogen adsorption–desorption measurements (providing information on the specific surface area of 305 m2/g and pore size of 7.6 nm), thermogravimetric analysis (showing a significant weight loss between 100°C and 800°C of 18.8% which corresponds to the mass of the immobilized organic layer), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) (showing an increased surface roughness on the silica beads after surface modification). A number of structurally different chiral compounds could be much better resolved on the amylose carbamate-modified cage-like CSP while the cage-like stationary phase without amylose derivative showed weak enantiomer separation performance. New materials may open new avenues for separations and a considerable attention has been recently paid to covalent organic frameworks (COFs), which are porous crystal materials consisting of multiple, organic, small-molecule monomers connected by reversible covalent bonds. Chiral COFs for chiral separation are typically immobilized on silica gel. Such type of composite material has been proposed by Wang, Xie, and coworkers [8]. A chiral core–shell composite material was prepared by stirring 2,4,6-trihydroxybenzene-1,3,5-tricarbaldehyde, 2,5-diaminopyridine, (S)-2-methylpyrrolidine and 3-aminopropylsilica at room temperature for 7 days in dichloromethane (see Figure 1). A comparison of powder x-ray diffraction patterns, FT-IR spectra, and SEM images (Figure 1) of chiral COF material immobilized to silica, aminopropyl silica, and chiral COF material (not immobilized) indicated the successful surface modification. The chiral COF composite material could separate the enantiomers of structurally different chiral compounds under normal-phase conditions. Another article of the collection reviewed the synthesis approaches of COF materials and their utility in separation science with specific focus on biomedical applications [9]. Their exciting features such as chemical diversity from various covalently linked organic building blocks, high surface coverage through their nanoporous structures, and tunable porosity have raised great attention of material and separation scientists. Synthesis and chemical structures like dedicated applications are manifold and the review by Nala, Gajula, and coworkers gives a good overview of some recent trends.

During drug discovery, new drug candidates are subjected to numerous in vitro characterization methodologies. Among others, the lipophilicity of new drug candidates is experimentally determined as it can influence the distribution within the body. One concept that has become popular and reached experimental practicality is immobilized artificial membrane (IAM) chromatography, where phospholipid membranes immobilized onto silica mimic biological interactions to simulate the transport across membranes. This chromatographic mode has the advantage of ease of automation, is connected to little compound consumption, and produces minimal waste. In one work from this collection, a new IAM phase prepared by copolymerization of 2-methylacryloxydodecyl phosphatidylserine (MDPS) with ethylenedimethacrylate (EDMA) was prepared in capillary format for nano-high-performance liquid chromatography (nHPLC) to predict the permeability for the blood–brain barrier [10]. This PS-mimicking phospholipid membrane polymer monolithic column showed decent correlations with correlation coefficient of 0.73 between log BB (of compounds with known blood–brain permeability) and the CHI IAM at pH 7.4 as measured with the poly(MPS-co-EDMA) monolith, potentially useful for a first quick estimation of the blood–brain barrier. Kubo and coworkers took a closer look into the retention and selectivity characteristics of fluorous affinity chromatography [11]. A fluoroalkyl-modified silica gel column was synthesized and the retention of polyfluoroalkyl substances was investigated and compared to a corresponding alkyl-silica phase without fluorine substitution. It was found that retention of fluorine compounds increased with their number of fluorine atoms on the fluorine-containing stationary phase, while all nonfluorine compounds were not retained. The binding increments of fluorous affinity were essentially established on the new stationary phase and compared to a commercial fluorous alkyl stationary phase (Fluofix-II). It could be demonstrated that the new fluorinated column showed higher retention of fluorinated compounds compared to the tested commercially available fluorinated column.

Several articles reported the synthesis and application of new ion-exchange or mixed-mode ion-exchange materials. Huang et al. described the synthesis of monodisperse PS-DVB microspheres as stationary phase matrix which was activated by Friedel–Crafts acylation with chloroacetylchloride followed by nucleophilic substitution functionalization using mercaptosuccinic acid as well as further modification of the remaining double bonds on the beads by thiol-ene click reaction with mercaptosuccinic acid to increase the capacity of the new weak cation exchange resins [12]. Six common cations (Li+, Na+, NH4+, K+, Mg2+, and Ca2+) could be separated within 25 min. Liu and coworkers utilized COF technology to construct a poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) based anion-exchanger for the separation of conventional anions, organic acids, and carbohydrates [13]. Thus, poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) microspheres were loaded with p-phenylenediamine-1,3,5-triformylphloroglucinol derived nanoparticles constructed by an in situ growth method. The imine groups were then reduced to amino groups and subsequently quaternized. The well-characterized COF-based anion-exchanger microspheres showed good selectivity for the above-mentioned analytes and excellent stability. The same group proposed another chemistry to prepare an organic polymer-based anion exchanger by curing reaction of triglycidyl isocyanate with triethylenetetramine on the surface of PS-DVB microspheres [14]. Since mere PS beads have low chemical reactivity for further surface modification, a crosslinking surface functionalization affording a polymer network on top of the silica beads was found a viable option to generate high capacity anion-exchanger beads. Following the above network formation, the available amino groups on the beads were quaternized and then successfully tested for the separation of inorganic anions, organic acids, and carbohydrates.

Mixed-mode reversed-phase/anion-exchange type stationary phases were also in the focus of the special collection. Wolter et al. developed a series of mixed-mode stationary phases obtained by either immobilizing triphenylallylsilane or 2-propinyl-triphenylphosphonium bromide onto thiol-silica by thiol-ene click reaction, leading to triphenyl-type and triphenylphosphonium-type mixed-mode phases [15]. The latter stationary phase was oxidized with performic acid affording sulfonic acid moieties of the residual thiol groups on the modified silica surface giving this material a zwitterionic character. Zeta potential measurements clearly showed a distinct surface charge character of the three mixed-mode stationary phases and hence complementarity in retention and selectivity profiles to each other and commercial and in-house benchmarking stationary phases. The triphenylphosphonium SAX stationary phase was found to be particularly interesting for oligonucleotide separations, for example, for siRNA Patisiran. The double-tethered surface bonding of this phase makes it more stable and compatible with biochromatography conditions such as high salt in ion-exchange type separations. The great potential of mixed-mode chromatography in challenging separations was outlined in an article on the separation of glucosinolates, which are a group of secondary metabolites in Brassica vegetables [16]. Due to their anionic form, structural diversities, and coexistence of other phenolic compounds, their separation represented a significant challenge on common RP type columns. Using a commercial BEH C18 AX column versus a conventional C18 column, it could be demonstrated that the optimized method for the mixed-mode column was applicable to the complex Brassica vegetable samples and could, in addition to the 17 well-resolved glucosinolate peaks, also separate 34 peaks for phenolic compounds which therefore could be identified in broccoli microgreen, suggesting the successful, better application scenarios for qualitative analysis in comparison with the single-mode reversed-phase C18 column.

With the increasing importance of biopharmaceuticals and new drug modalities with more complex structures than traditional drugs, new challenges arise for the characterization of their critical quality attributes. LC plays an important role, yet stationary phases often need adjustments in surface chemistries and morphology. Ke and coworkers developed a series of stationary phases for the fractionation of low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) with tailored pore size by pseudomorphic synthesis of pore size–tunable mesoporous silica spherical particles [17]. Spherical silica with narrow pore size distributions in the range of 40–80 Å could be obtained by a combination of quaternary ammonium cationic surfactants and different kinds of swelling agents, including polypropylene glycol, 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene, alkanes, and alkanols. Larger pore sizes in the range of 110–200 Å were obtained by using alkyl imidazolium ionic liquid surfactants as pore (size) tailoring agent under mild conditions. The materials were modified with diol chemistry and employed for the fraction of LMWHs by size-exclusion chromatography. Pore size is one of the key factors for the selectivity and performance in SEC. However, nonspecific adsorption may influence SEC performance. Actually, even after decades of optimization of diol-phases for SEC application, nonspecific interactions with silanols or hydrophobic patches on such materials could not be completely offset, as desired in this noninteractive chromatographic mode. However, recently researchers of Waters could make a major step forward with a new surface chemistry which they present in a research article of this special collection. Lauber and coworkers introduced a bridged ethylene polyethylene oxide (BE-PEO) surface chemistry to improve their packing materials for wide-pore size-exclusion chromatography [18]. In their work, a series of different BE-PEO surface-modified SEC materials were synthesized on 1000 Å, 3 µm silica particles by surface modification with a mixture of hydroxy(polyethyleneoxy)propyl]triethoxysilane (HO-PEO) and 1,2-bis(triethoxysilyl)ethane (BTEE) (see Figure 2). These trifunctional silanes can be attached to the surface and also crosslink between each other due to BTEE leading to a crosslinked polymeric network of ligands covalently bonded to the surface. The inertness of the bonded phase could be significantly improved due to fewer unreacted silanols exposed to the surface. The chromatographic performance of BE-PEO silica-packed columns was evaluated by separations of a protein test mixture, a DNA ladder, monoclonal antibody-based therapeutics, and adeno-associated viruses (AAVs).

With highly efficient modern UHPLC columns, detrimental effects from extra-column peak dispersion contributions and nonspecific interactions with metal frits and other stainless-steel column and system surfaces become visible, particularly in the form of peak tailing. Also, low recovery due to irreversible adsorption is sometimes a problem and requires preconditioning of the column and system with a representative sample prior to injection of the real study samples. Multiple vendors have introduced solutions to this problem by surface inactivation of column and system hardware with polymer coatings. Two studies of the special collection addressed this issue. In one study, multiple reversed-phase type columns (Accucore C18, CORTECS Shield RP18, Acquity HSS T3, Acquity Premier HSS T3, Accucore 150-C4, Accucore PFP, Synergi Polar RP, and Acclaim WCX-1) were screened for their performance in the analysis of corrosion inhibitors which are nasty molecules from chromatography perspective due to their sticky quaternary ammonium, imidazoline, and phosphoric ester functionalities [19]. From these experiments, it turned out that shielding of stationary phase silanols, for example, by trifunctional grafting of the Acquity HSS T3 stationary phase, and inactivation of column hardware surface, for example, as realized by Acquity Premier HSS T3, appeared to be promising strategies. The latter gave the best performance. Rudaz and coworkers demonstrated that the passivated hardware of a biphenyl stationary phase had clearly significant benefits in steroid analysis, in particular for sulfated and glucuronated steroids [20]. The peak asymmetry of sulfated species could be significantly reduced and was instrumental for the efficient simultaneous analysis of 52 steroids in plasma including their Phase II metabolites.

A number of papers in the special collection were related to challenges in the analysis of biomolecules and bioparticles. Bartolini, Sardella, and coworkers investigated different columns and uncommon nonaqueous reversed-phase (NARP) chromatography for the separation of vitamin D2 and D3 (one additional double bond and methyl group) [21]. The two, although not being isomers, are difficult to separate by common RPLC as the additional double-bond of D3 reduces the retention while the additional methyl group increases retention, leading to similar retention characteristics. The RP type stationary phases were evaluated which specifically differed in their hydrophobicity and silanophilic activity, including a GraceSmart RP C18 column without silanol endcapping, a Robusta RP C18 column with silanol endcapping, and a Waters Xbridge RP C18 column with ethylene-bridged hybrid (BEH) particle technology. The Xbridge C18 stationary phase exhibited the most favorable performance, leading to a resolution of 1.6 with the employed NARP allowing the use of LC-UV for the analysis. Pons and Marcus presented a method for the isolation of urinary extracellular vesicles (EVs) and exosomes, respectively, via hydrophobic interaction chromatography using a nylon-6 capillary-channeled polymer (C-CP) fiber column (see Figure 3) [22]. Exosomes, a subset of EVs in the size range of 30–150 nm, are of significant interest as sample material for biomedical applications such as diagnostic testing and therapeutic delivery. They can be isolated from various biofluids (urine, blood, and saliva) by techniques such as lengthy ultracentrifugation or SEC with limited selectivity and purity. Pons and Marcus suggest step-gradient hydrophobic interaction chromatography method with nylon-6 C-CP fiber column as isolation technique. It provided increased isolation efficiency, higher loading capacity, and more gentle EV elution. Various characterization methods confirmed the quality of the isolated exosomes and the method turned out to be a low-cost and time-efficient (< 20 min) method (Figure 3). In another study of bioparticle separations, Černigoj and coworkers reported on the column reproducibility of a quaternary amine (QA) chromatographic monolithic column, also in the course of upscaling, for AAV viral vector manufacturing using linear potassium chloride (KCl) gradient for elution [23]. A key challenge in this field is the separation of full AAV capsids from undesired nonfunctional (empty, partially filled, etc.) capsids. Since their separations are sensitive to even small changes of the stationary phase, the column reproducibility is of prime importance. In their work, the authors demonstrated the high quality of their monolithic column and excellent repeatability.

This special collection of trends in stationary phases and column technology is a nice representative cross-section of current technologies and innovations from the leading groups on stationary phase synthesis and column technology development. Their contributions are highly appreciated.

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来源期刊
Journal of separation science
Journal of separation science 化学-分析化学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
16.10%
发文量
408
审稿时长
1.8 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Separation Science (JSS) is the most comprehensive source in separation science, since it covers all areas of chromatographic and electrophoretic separation methods in theory and practice, both in the analytical and in the preparative mode, solid phase extraction, sample preparation, and related techniques. Manuscripts on methodological or instrumental developments, including detection aspects, in particular mass spectrometry, as well as on innovative applications will also be published. Manuscripts on hyphenation, automation, and miniaturization are particularly welcome. Pre- and post-separation facets of a total analysis may be covered as well as the underlying logic of the development or application of a method.
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