0000000000956306

AUTHOR

Maria-josé Ruiz-ángel

0000-0001-8575-9603

showing 3 related works from this author

Performance of a Chromolith RP-18e column for the screening of β-blockers

2009

The chromatographic performance of a monolithic column (Chromolith RP-18e) was comprehensively examined in the isocratic separation of ten beta-blockers, using ACN-water mobile phases, and compared with the performance of three microparticulate RP columns manufactured with different types of silica: Spherisorb ODS-2, Kromasil C18 and XTerra MS C18. The comparison considered the analysis time, selectivity, peak shape (column efficiency and asymmetry) and resolution, and was extended to a wide range of mobile phase compositions. The Chromolith column showed good performance for the analysis of beta-blockers with regard to the packed columns. In terms of selectivity and analysis time, the grea…

AcetonitrilesChromatographyMonolithic HPLC columnElutionAdrenergic beta-AntagonistsAnalytical chemistryFiltration and SeparationReversed-phase chromatographyBuffersSilicon DioxideHigh-performance liquid chromatographyAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundSilanolchemistryColumn (typography)Particle SizeSelectivityPorosityTriethylamineChromatography High Pressure LiquidJournal of Separation Science
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Comparison of the performance of non-ionic and anionic surfactants as mobile phase additives in the RPLC analysis of basic drugs

2011

Surfactants added to the mobile phases in reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) give rise to a modified stationary phase, due to the adsorption of surfactant monomers. Depending on the surfactant nature (ionic or non-ionic), the coated stationary phase can exhibit a positive net charge, or just change its polarity remaining neutral. Also, micelles in the mobile phase introduce new sites for solute interaction. This affects the chromatographic behavior, especially in the case of basic compounds. Two surfactants of different nature, the non-ionic Brij-35 and the anionic sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) added to water or aqueous-organic mixtures, are here compared in the separation of basic …

ChromatographyChemistryIonic bondingFiltration and SeparationReversed-phase chromatographyMicelleAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionPulmonary surfactantChemical engineeringMicellar liquid chromatographyPhase (matter)Sodium dodecyl sulfateJournal of Separation Science
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LC of high to moderately polar basic drugs in urine with water and detergent, and direct injection

2016

Background: Micellar LC was first proposed as a ‘green’ mode using mobile phases of water and surfactant. However, in most procedures a small amount of organic solvent is required to decrease the retention to convenient values. Results & methodology: Mixed micellar mobile phases prepared with both cationic (sodium dodecyl sulphate) and nonionic surfactant (Brij-35) modulate the retention of high to moderately polar basic drugs to practical times, eliminating the need of organic solvent. While the mobile phase is continuously recycled through the system, the stationary phase performance is maintained after repetitive injection of the samples. Discussion & conclusion: Through an exte…

SodiumClinical Biochemistrychemistry.chemical_elementUrine010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesPolyethylene GlycolsAnalytical ChemistrySurface-Active AgentsPulmonary surfactantLimit of DetectionPhase (matter)HumansGeneral Pharmacology Toxicology and PharmaceuticsMicellesChromatographyChemistryOrganic solvent010401 analytical chemistryCationic polymerizationSodium Dodecyl SulfateWaterGeneral Medicine0104 chemical sciencesMedical Laboratory TechnologyPharmaceutical PreparationsStationary phaseFlow Injection AnalysisPolarChromatography LiquidBioanalysis
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