vishal vayeda
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2008-01-01 08:56
(6752 d 06:19 ago)

Posting: # 1444
Views: 5,107
 

 dead volume definition [Bioanalytics]

Dear Sir,

I have some query regarding the definiation of dead volume which is given below,

Some of the reference books gives the definition of dead volume as follows,

"Time required by the inert sample to migrate from the column inlet to column outlet without 'being retained' non as a dead volume"

now my question is,

In column specification we have a calcuation for capacity facotor K' (formula is k'=tr-to/to) and as a 'to', first retained peak of the combination is consider. kindly give me the actul procedure to calculate the dead volume and also discribe how it is effect my chromatogram if the value of k' is >10, < 1 and >30 ?

Regards,

Vishal Vayeda
Helmut
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2008-01-01 18:02
(6751 d 21:13 ago)

@ vishal vayeda
Posting: # 1448
Views: 4,050
 

 dead volume definition

Dear Vishal!

❝ In column specification we have a calcuation for capacity facotor K'

❝ (formula is k'=tr-to/to) and as a 'to', first retained peak of the

❝ combination is consider.


I think that you missed one pair of perentheses; the formula should read:
k'= (tR - t0)/t0

❝ kindly give me the actul procedure to calculate the dead volume

❝ and also discribe how it is effect my chromatogram if the

❝ value of k' is >10, < 1 and >30 ?


One should distinguish between theoretical dead volume (the interstitial volume between the particles of the package material + the porous volume of the packing material) and the experimental dead volume, which includes the volume of the entire LC system (injector, mixing chamber, fittings, connecting capillaries, etc).
For a glossary of terms see this article from LCGC Europe (Feb 2002).
The one compound we used in getting an experimental value for t0 in RP LC is thiourea - SC(NH2)2; others are uracil and acetone.
You may calculate the dead volume (VM) from the geometry of your column (length, diameter), the flow rate and the retention time.
VM = t0 × v, where v=velocity of the mobile phase.

An approximate formula uses the column's inner diameter d [cm] and column length L [cm], as well as the flow rate F [ml/min]:
VM = 0.5 × d2 × L, and tM = VM / F

Example:
d=0.46cm, L=15cm, F=1.5mL/min
VM=1.6mL, tM=1.1min

You will hardly find a compound with a tR < t0 (besides dissolved oxygen...).
In practical LC applications I would not go with a method with a k' of less than 3-5. The higher the k' the better the separation, but you are loosing sensitivity (peaks are getting broader). Therefore k' >10-15 is also not a good idea.

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