6533b829fe1ef96bd1289895
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Electrokinetic capillary chromatography in a polar continuous‐phase water‐in‐oil microemulsion constituted by water, sodium dodecyl sulfate, and n ‐pentanol
Carla Rosane Barboza MendonçaCarla Rosane Barboza MendonçaClarisse Maria Sartori PiatnickiGuillermo Ramis-ramosErnesto F. Simó-alfonsoClara Ismeria Damiani Bicasubject
Clinical BiochemistryAnalytical chemistrySalt (chemistry)ElectrolyteBiochemistryAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundElectrokinetic phenomenaPentanolsPlant OilsMicroemulsionAmmoniumSodium dodecyl sulfateDissolutionChromatography Micellar Electrokinetic Capillarychemistry.chemical_classificationAqueous solutionChromatographyElectrophoresis CapillaryReproducibility of ResultsSodium Dodecyl SulfateWaterDietary FatschemistryEmulsionsHydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactionsdescription
A water-in-oil (w/o) microemulsion (ME) constituted by 15% Tris buffer, pH 8.4, in water and 85% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)/n-pentanol 1:4 mixture, capable of dissolving up to 30% vegetable oils and lard, was used as background electrolyte in reverse microemulsion electrokinetic capillary chromatography (RMEEKC). Owing to the free SDS ions in the continuous phase and some degree of percolation, the ME showed a high conductivity (0.65 mS. cm(-1) at 25 degrees C) and sustained a very stable capillary current. Previous rinsing of the capillary with a quaternary ammonium salt for electroosmotic flow (EOF) reduction, a series of nonionic and anionic solutes dissolved either in the ME or in fat samples diluted with the ME (1:4 ratio), were injected. Using -20 kV, fair separations of the solutes in the migration time order singly charged anions < nonionic solutes < doubly charged anions approximately pyromellitate were obtained, salicylate (I) showing by far the shortest migration time, and phthalate (II) and pyromellitate the longest. Separation was attributed to partition between the aqueous droplets, where pyromellitate and II were assumed to be trapped, and the n-pentanol continuous phase, where the mobilitites could be also modified by association of the solutes with SDS ions. Adequate EOF markers were not found, thus the relative mobility of any solute with respect to the mobility of the droplets, mu(r), was expressed as a fraction of the mobility of I with respect to that of the droplets, being mu(r) = (t(II) - t(R)) t(I) / [(t(II) - t(I)) t(R)], where t(R), t(I), and t(II) are the migration times of the solutes I and II, respectively. The application of RMEEKC to the analysis of both hydrophilic and hydrophobic samples, including edible fats, was demonstrated.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2005-02-17 | ELECTROPHORESIS |