GB1592885A - Bimodal chromatographic resolving zone - Google Patents

Bimodal chromatographic resolving zone Download PDF

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GB1592885A
GB1592885A GB5102277A GB5102277A GB1592885A GB 1592885 A GB1592885 A GB 1592885A GB 5102277 A GB5102277 A GB 5102277A GB 5102277 A GB5102277 A GB 5102277A GB 1592885 A GB1592885 A GB 1592885A
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pore size
macroparticles
bimodal
diameter
distribution
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EIDP Inc
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/281Sorbents specially adapted for preparative, analytical or investigative chromatography
    • B01J20/286Phases chemically bonded to a substrate, e.g. to silica or to polymers
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/02Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material
    • B01J20/10Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material comprising silica or silicate
    • B01J20/103Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof comprising inorganic material comprising silica or silicate comprising silica
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/28Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof characterised by their form or physical properties
    • B01J20/28002Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof characterised by their form or physical properties characterised by their physical properties
    • B01J20/28004Sorbent size or size distribution, e.g. particle size
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/28Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof characterised by their form or physical properties
    • B01J20/28014Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof characterised by their form or physical properties characterised by their form
    • B01J20/28016Particle form
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/28Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof characterised by their form or physical properties
    • B01J20/28054Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof characterised by their form or physical properties characterised by their surface properties or porosity
    • B01J20/28088Pore-size distribution
    • B01J20/28092Bimodal, polymodal, different types of pores or different pore size distributions in different parts of the sorbent
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/281Sorbents specially adapted for preparative, analytical or investigative chromatography
    • B01J20/282Porous sorbents
    • B01J20/283Porous sorbents based on silica
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J20/00Solid sorbent compositions or filter aid compositions; Sorbents for chromatography; Processes for preparing, regenerating or reactivating thereof
    • B01J20/30Processes for preparing, regenerating, or reactivating
    • B01J20/32Impregnating or coating ; Solid sorbent compositions obtained from processes involving impregnating or coating
    • B01J20/3291Characterised by the shape of the carrier, the coating or the obtained coated product
    • B01J20/3295Coatings made of particles, nanoparticles, fibers, nanofibers
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J2220/00Aspects relating to sorbent materials
    • B01J2220/50Aspects relating to the use of sorbent or filter aid materials
    • B01J2220/54Sorbents specially adapted for analytical or investigative chromatography
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N30/00Investigating or analysing materials by separation into components using adsorption, absorption or similar phenomena or using ion-exchange, e.g. chromatography or field flow fractionation
    • G01N30/02Column chromatography
    • G01N30/50Conditioning of the sorbent material or stationary liquid
    • G01N30/52Physical parameters
    • G01N2030/524Physical parameters structural properties
    • G01N2030/525Physical parameters structural properties surface properties, e.g. porosity

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Analytical Chemistry (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Inorganic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Nanotechnology (AREA)
  • Solid-Sorbent Or Filter-Aiding Compositions (AREA)
  • Treatment Of Liquids With Adsorbents In General (AREA)

Abstract

The powder for chromatographic separations is used in the separating zone of chromatographs. It essentially contains a multiplicity of separate porous macroparticles, each of which has a mean diameter of 0.5 to 500 mu m. The powder has a bimodal pore size distribution, the mean pore size for each distribution mode being such that the straight-line portions of the molecular weight calibration curve for each pore size in the bimodal distribution essentially do not intersect. Each distribution mode has a pore volume which is such that these straight-line portions run essentially parallel. At the same time, the mean pore sizes of the components of the bimodal distribution are separated by approximately an order of magnitude. The component of the bimodal distribution having the smaller mean pore size accounts for 30 to 60% of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal distribution having the larger mean pore size accounts for 70 to 40% of it. The macroparticles are superficially porous and have an impermeable core. They have an envelope composed of a multiplicity of identical single layers made up of colloidal microparticles which touch one another and surround the core and which have a diameter of 0.005 to 1.0 mu m. The macroparticles have a diameter of 5 to 500 mu m and are composed mainly of silicon dioxide. <IMAGE>

Description

(54) BIMODAL CHROMATOGRAPHIC RESOLVING ZONE (71) We, E. I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS & COMPANY, a Corporation organised and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware, U.S.A., of Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A., do hereby declare the invention for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement:- Background of the Invention 1. Field of the Invention: This invention relates to chromatography, particularly size exclusion chromatography, and to the composition of the resolving zones used in such chromatography. It also relates to a process for performing chromatographic separation.
2. Discussion of the Prior Art: U.S. Patent 3,505,785 discloses superficially porous microspheroids, having an average diameter in the range of 5 to 500 microns, which are composed of an impervious core coated with a multiplicity of monolayers of colloidal inorganic particles having an average size in the range of 0.005 to 1.0 microns. U.S. Patent 3,855,172 discloses microspheroids which are porous throughout and have an average diameter in the range of 0.5 to 20 microns. They are composed of colloidal inorganic refractory particles having an average diameter in the range of 0.005 to 1.0 microns.
The use of such microspheroids in chromatography, particularly size-exclusion chromatography is well-known. In such application, porous microspheroids are used as packings for the chromatograph resolving zone and function to separate the components of a sample based on differences in hydrodynamic size of the components. The molecular weight (MW) of the components can be calculated as a function of the hydrodynamic size. A plot of the molecular weight fraction eluted at a given retention volume (VR) for a particular packing material reveals that for a given pore volume in the packing material, certain molecular weight fractions are totally excluded because of their large size and certain molecular weight fractions are totally permeating because of their small size, Between these two extremes is a range of molecular weight fractions that will be preferentially retarded by contact with the porous particles, and materials containing these molecular weight fractions can be fractionated by that particular packing material.
The actual working relationship in size exclusion chromatography is the molecular weight calibration curve which is normally a logarithmic plot of the molecular weight versus the retention volume. Molecular weight calibration curves characteristically have a substantially linear portion so that the molecular weight of a retained fraction of a sample can be determined accurately if the retention volume for that particular molecular weight fraction occurs in the linear portion of the molecular weight calibration curve and less accurately if it occurs outside that linear range. Molecular weight calibration curves characteristically have linear portions that span approximately two decades in the log molecular weight scale for a single pore size. To obtain a calibration curve with a linear portion spanning more than two decades of the molecular weight scale, the tendency is to use a chromatographic resolving zone composed of many columns, each having different pore sizes. Specifically, as taught by "Know More About Your Polymer", a 1976 publication of Waters Associates, Milord, Mass., to expand the linear range of the molecular weight calibration curve so that materials containing a wide range of molecular weight fractions can be separated and detected. four or five columns are combined, each with molecular weight calibration curves whose linear portions overlap one another.
Unfortunately, the range of expected linear molecular weight calibration does not occur. The linear portion of the molecular weight calibration curve for the combined particles can be increased in this way but the maximum appears to be only about three decades, which often is less than the range of molecular weight found in normal sample compositions.
Summary of the invention According to this invention, there is provided a resolving zone for a chromatograph which provides a wider range of linearity in its molecular weight calibration curve and avoids the inconvenience of using multiple columns with overlapping linear calibration. This resolving zone comprises a plurality of porous macroparticles chosen to provide the resolving zone with a bimodal pore distribution, the average pore size for each mode being such that the linear portion of the molecular weight calibration curves for each pore size in the bimodal distribution are substantially nonoverlapping, the pore volume of each mode being such that the aforesaid linear portions are substantially parallel. As used herein, the term "average pore size" means volume average pore size. To achieve the maximum range of the linear portion of the molecular weight calibration curve, the pore sizes of the modes of the bimodal distribution should be about one order of magnitude apart. The term "bimodal pore distribution as used herein includes, where the content allows the use of more than two modes of particle size distribution so long as any two adiacent modes have calibration curves which do not overlap and which have substantially parallel linear portions, the average pore volume of each of the two adjacent modes being usally separated about one order of magnitude.
The macroparticles useful in this invention can be refractory particles such as silica or alumina or they can be non-refractory such as crosslinked polymer gels. In the preferred embodiment the macroparticles are refractory macroparticles composed primarily of silica and the component of the bimodal pore distribution having the smaller average pore size provides about 30 to 6001. preferably 40 to 6001, more preferably 40 to 55?; and still more preferably, 45 to 55,", of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone with the balance of the toal pore volume being provided by the component of the bimodal distribution having the larger average pore size. The resolving zone can be composed of a plurality of macroparticles, each having a bimodal pore distribution, or can be composed of a plurality of macroparticles each having one pore distribution combined with a plurality of macroparticles having another pore distribution.
This invention also provides an improved process for performing chromatographic separation comprising the steps of: (a) placing the material to be separated in a carrier fluid; (b) contacting the carrier fluid with a resolving zone comprising a plurality of porous, refractory, macroparticles chosen to provide the resolving zone with a bimodal pore distribution the average pore size for each mode being such that the linear portions of the molecular weight calibration curve for each pore size in the bimodal distribution are nonoverlapping, and the pore volume of each mode being such that the aforesaid linear portions are substantially parallel, and (e) determining the extent of retention of the materials by the resolving zone.
Brief Description of the Drawings The present invention can best be described by reference to the following figures in which: Figure 1 is a representative calibration curve of molecular weight plotted on a log scale against retention volume; Figure 2 is a calibration curve for resolving zone composed of six different particles having differing pore sizes; Figure 3 is a schematic representation of a liquid chromatograph showing the carrier fluid injection point 12, resolving zone 13 and detector 14; showing particularly resolving zones composed of 1 and 2 separate columns; Figure 4 is a representative calibration curve for a bimodal and a polymodal resolving zone; Figure 5 is a partially cut-away schematic representation of one embodiment of a totally porous macroparticle having a bimodal pore distribution; Figure 6 is a partially cut-away schematic representation of a second embodiment of a totally porous macroparticle with a bimodal pore distribution; Figure 7 is a partially cut-away schematic representation of an embodiment of a superficially porous macroparticle having a bimodal pore distribution; Figure 8 is a mercury intrusion plot for particles such as that shown in Figure 6; Figure 9 is a comparison of a calibration curve obtained using two of the particles, which had nonoverlapping particle size distributions, shown in Figure 2 compared with a calibration curve obtained using five of the particles all having overlapping particle size distributions shown in Figure 2; and Figure 10 is a calibration curve obtained using the bimodal particles such as that shown in Figure 6.
Detailed Description of the Invention In size exclusion chromatography, a chromatograph such as that shown schematically in Figure 3 is used. A material to be separated is injected into a carrier fluid stream at some injection point 12 and forced under pressure through a chromatographic resolving zone 13 to a detector 14. In passing through the resolving zone, the materials in the carrier fluid contact the packing material in the resolving zone and are retained for a time characteristic of their molecular weight (MW). In time, as more volume of carrier fluid passes through the chromatographic column, the material temporarily retained by the packing material is eluted from the column. The detector determines when each component of the material leaves the resolving zone. The output of the detector is characteristically a peak such as that shown schematically in the bottom of Figure 4.
The resolving zones used in size exclusion chromatography are generally columns packed with porous particles such as those described in U.S. Patent 3,505,785 and U.S. Patent 3,855,172, or more recently the macroporous microspheroids disclosed in our specification No 1506114.
Using such packing materials, a typical relationship of the log MW (a function of solute hydrodynamic radius) versus retention volume (VR) is shown by the single solid line on the left-hand side of Figure 1. The limiting retention volume at a point A is known as the total exclusion volume, which is determined by the maximum pore size available for permeation by the solute materials that are totally rejected from the internal porosity elute at this retention volume, and solutes corresponding to this molecular weight and larger are not fractionated by the system. Point B represents the volume associated with species which totally permeate the internal pores of the packing material, and is known as the total permeation volume. Thus, materials corresponding to this MW and smaller cannot be substantially fractionated by this separating system. The difference between retention volumes A and B represents partial permeation of solutes, and it is within this volume range that separation occurs. The difference between the retention volume at B and retention volume at A is a function of the total internal pore volume of the packing.
Between retention volumes at A and B there is an approximately linear region of the log MW versus retention volume curve (points C to D) which is described by the following equations: VR=C,C2 logMW (1) and MW=D,e--D,V, (2) C2 is the slope of the linear portion of the calibration curve (in ml/decade-MW) and C, is the intercept of this linear portion. To extract molecular weight information from this calibration plot, experimental chromatograms and equation 2 above are utilized. D, relates to the intercept of this linear portion of the calibration curve and D2 relates to its slope. These equations are well-known to those skilled in the art and are widely used by those characterizing macromolecules.
The additive characteristics of two identical columns used in the size-exclusion chromatography is well known. As indicated in Figure 1. connecting two identical columns (same particles, same length) with identical calibration curves indicated by the two solid lines is equivalent to doubling the length of a single column. As indicated, connecting these tuo columns increases the total available pore volume, thus increasing the retention volume range between total permeation and total exclusion. but maintaining the same molecular weight fraction range. As shown in Figure 1 when two columns are connected, the molecular weight fraction range remains about 3,000 to 80,000, even though the retention volume is doubled. The calibration curve for the combination of the two columns is shown by the dashed line. The additive function describing this relationship is:
Traditionally, polymer fractionation has been accomplished with packings having the broadest possible pore-size distribution. This is normally obtained by connecting several columns of different pore size to produce a separating system covering the molecular weight range of interest. Figure 2 shows a series of molecular weight calibration curves for six different chromatographic resolving zone, each filled with porous silica particles having different pore sizes. The designation and average pore volume for these six particles is given in Table I below: TABLE I Designation Pore Size (A") I PMS-50 60 2 PMS-300 125 3 PMS-600 195 4 PMS-800 300 5 PMS-1500 750 6 PMS-4000 3500 These particles were made as described in Specification No 1506114, and U.S.
Patent 3,782,075.
The bar graphs to the right of Figure 2 indicate the linear range of each calibration plot. To achieve a linear combined calibration curve spanning a molecular weight range from 103 to 106, a combination of six columns traditionally would be used, each composed of the individual particles corresponding to the six graphs.
In this invention the relationship given in equation 3 has been exploited to improve the accuracy, versatility, and convenience of the size-exclusion process.
This relationship predicts a previously unrecognized phenomena, namely, that to obtain a wide linear log MW-retention volume relationship, a series of columns having substantially overlapping linear molecular weight fractionation ranges (i.e., linear portions) should not be used. Rather, columns having pore sizes, chosen so that linear portions of the molecular weight versus retention volume curves of adjacent columns do not overlap, should be used. This produces a far wider linear range in the calibration curve. As shown representatively in Figure 4, a polymodal pore distribution not having the characteristics of the present invention in the resolving zone produces a narrow linear portion on the molecular weight calibration curve, while a bimodal distribution having such characteristics produces a much wider linear portion. The calibration curve for the polymodal distribution does not encompass the entire molecular weight distribution of the sample within its linear range, whereas the calibration curve for the bimodal distribution does.
The advantage of using chromatographic columns having a bimodal pore distribution, whether connecting columns of individual pore size or using columns containing a physical mixture of particles of two different pore sizes can, therefore, be seen from Figure 4. Molecular weight calibration curves of the type shown by the bimodal pore size distribution is greatly preferred when attempting to characterize a polymer with the type of molecular weight distribution illustrated at the bottom of the plot.
A quantitative comparison of a polymodal pore-size distribution versus bimodal pore-distribution system is given in Figure 9. Figure 9 shows a polystyrene calibration curve for a polymodal and for a bimodal resolving zone. The set of columns used to produce the polymodal distribution are filled with a packing material labeled 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6 in Figure 2. The individual columns have substantially overlapping calibration plots as in the traditional mode. The approximate linear calibration range (dashed line is the linear fit) of this combined broad pore-size distribution set is only about two and one-half decades of molecular weight. On the other hand, the bimodal distribution shown in Figure 9, obtained by connecting columns of only two pore sizes (that of particles 1 and 5 in Figure 2) results in a linear molecular weight calibration curve spanning more than four decades of molecular weight.
To obtain these unexpected and improved results, the individual calibration curves for the two pore sizes used in the bimodal distribution must not overlap.
This is achieved by choosing particles with the appropriate pore size. The average pore sizes of the bimodal distribution are usually about one order of magnitude apart. With this bimodal approach, linear calibration curves having up to five decades of molecular weight range are obtained. A trimodal arrangement of similar type could result in up to seven decades molecular weight range linearity. In addition to having molecular weight calibration curves which are non-overlapping, the internal pore volume of the two modes should be such that the linear portions of the calibration curves are substantially parallel. The term substantially parallel means that the shapes of the linear portions of the calibration curves need not be exactly parallel provided some deviation from linearity can be accepted. For example, reference to Figure 9 indicates that the overlapping polymodal calibration curve which represents the prior art is far from linear over the range predicted.
When 30 to 600/, preferably 40 to 60/, more preferably 40 to 55 /" and still more preferably 45 to 55%, of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in each resolving zone is provided by the component of the bimodal pore distribution having the lower average pore size with the balance provided by the component having the larger average pore size, the linear portions of the individual calibration curves are substantially parallel. Reference to Figure 10 shows the deviation from linearity in the calibration curve when the pore volume ratio is 40:60. In the most preferred embodiment, however, each component of the bimodal pore distribution should provide about 50 /" of the total pore volume of the macroparticle in the resolving zone to reduce deviation from linearity in the calibration curve.
Best results are obtained using packing materials with a very narrow pore-size distribution. Pore size distributions of each of the bimodal systems should be 1.0 or less (2a) as shown in conventional log-normal plots of mercury porosimetry measurements. Ranges of 0.5 or less (2fas) are preferred. Within these ranges, pore size distribution is an insignificant factor in determining the D2 of the calibration plot, and the internal volume of the particles is dominant in determining the D2 of the calibration plot. If the pore size distribution is larger than the values given above, then the interrelationship of both pore size distribution plus internal volume determines the slope of the calibration curve.
The bimodal pore distribution used in the present invention can be achieved in one of two ways. The bimodal pore distribution can be provided by a plurality of macro-particles each having a bimodal pore distribution. In this instance, a single column such as that shown in the upper portion of Figure 3 can be used.
Alternately the bimodal pore distribution can be provided by using a plurality of macroparticles having one pore distribution and a plurality of macroparticles having another pore distribution. While particles with different pore size distributions can be mixed onto one column, the packing of such columns is less convenient and it is best to use two or more columns, each packed with particles of a single pore size distribution.
Individual particles of the desired pore size to produce the bimodal pore distribution can be produced by the techniques described in the patent specifications mentioned above. Polymeric gels, alumina and the wide range of refractory particles mentioned in these documents can be used, but silica is the preferred material, particularly for chromatographic separations. Particles having a bimodal pore distribution can either be totally porous or superficially porous macroparticles. The term macroparticle, as used herein, means the composite macroparticle (either totally or superficially porous) having an average diameter in the range of 0.5 to 500 microns. The totally porous embodiment of this particle is shown in Figure 5. Here the macroparticle 15 has an average diameter of 0.5 to 500 microns. Preferred macroparticles having average diameters of 5 to 50 microns.
The macroparticle is composed of a plurality of microparticles 16. each having an average diameter in the range of 0.005 to 1.0. preferably 0.005 to 0.5. microns. The individual microparticles are in turn composed of a pluralitv of ultramicroparticlcs 17 having an average diameter in the range of 1.0 to 30.0 nanometers with 2-20 being preferred. Between each microparticle is a macropore 18, and between each ultramicroparticle is a micropore 19. While these particles can in general have any shape, it is preferred that they have a spherical shape so that the macroparticles are actually macrospheres, the microparticles are microspheres and the ultramicroparticles are ultramicrospheres. The spherical nature of these materials improves their performance in chromatographic columns.
Alternatively, as shown in Figure 6, the totally porous macroparticle 15 can be composed of a core 20 comprising a plurality of ultramicroparticle 21 having an average diameter in the range of I to 30 nanometers, and a skin composed of a multiplicity of microparticles 22, each having a diameter in the range of 0. I to 1.0 microns, or more commonly, 0. I to 0.5 microns. The totally porous macroparticle produced by currently known techniques preferably have a diameter in the range of 0.5 to 50 microns.
One embodiment of a superficially porous macroparticle is shown in Figure 7.
Such macroparticle 22 has a diameter in the range of 0.5 to 500 or preferabls, 5 to 50, microns and comprise an impervious macrocore 24 and a coating of a multiplicity of like monolayers of like colloidal inorganic microparticles 25 joined to and surrounding the core. Each microparticle has an average diameter in the range of 0.0005 to 1.0 microns or preferably, 0.1 to 0.5 microns and the microparticles comprise from 0.2 to 250 of the total volume of the macropartlcle. 7he microparticle can be similar to that shown in Figure 5, composed totally of ultramicroparticle, or it can be similar to the microparticle shown in Figure 7.
composed of an impervious microcore 27 and a coating of a multiplicity of like monolayers of like colloidal inorganic ultramicroparticles 28 joined to and surrounding the core.
In either case, for the totally porous or the superficially porous particles, the pores between the individual microparticles in the macroparticle shall be referrcd to as the macropore 30 and provides one mode of the bimodal pore distribution, and the pores between the individual ultramicroparticle shall be referred to as the micropore 31 and provides the other mode of the bimodal pore distribution.
Recent terminology sometimes defines pores of the size designated as "micropores" herein as "mesopores".
EXAMPLE I The following describes the preparation of pellicular particles with a bimodal pore-size distribution. Such a structure is shown in Figure 7.
75 g of ZipaxB controlled porosity support (E. 1. du Pont de Nemours and Co.) ( < 37um) was stirred gently with 800 ml of 0.5 ' Lakeseal laboratory cleaner solution for 30 minutes. The excess solution was removed by decantation and washed with distilled water. This operation was repeated seven times, and the resulting powder filtered on a coarse sintered-glass filter and dried in air. The dry powder was then place in a three-inch diameter coarse sintered-glass funnel and treated with 100 ml of 0.5 /" Zelec DX (E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co.) solution for five minutes with stirring. The treated beads were filtered, then washed twice with 200 ml of distilled water and dried in the funnel with vacuum.
The beads were treated with 100 ml of 10% silica sol made from LudoxB AS (N 140A silica particles supplied by E. 1. du Pont de Nemours and Co.) (125 g of 30tun by weight silica in LudoxB AS diluted to 400 g with distilled water). The mixture of beads and silica sol was allowed to stand for 15 minutes in the funnel with frequent gen le stirring. Excess Ludos6 was then filtered off and the resulting wet cake washed four times by gently slurrying with about 400 ml of tap water and filtering. The cake was then allowed to air-dry in the filter under vacuum. This material was then dried at 1 500C for one hour in a circulating air oven and a small sample removed for surface area measurement.
The ZelecO DX silica sol treatment described above was repeated three more times to build up a crust of the 14A silica sol ultramicroparticles on the surface of the 2000A silica microparticles which originally made up the crust of the Zipax Zipax( < Du Pont trademark for chromatographic support Zelec(WDu Pont trademark for antistatic agents and mold release agents.
Ludox < Du Pont trademark for colloidal silica.
particles. The final particles were dried, and heated at 6500C for two hours to burn out the organic interlayer and sinter the particles into a mechanically stable condition. This sintered sample was then allowed to stand for two hours in large excess of 0.001 M ammonium hydroxide with frequent stirring. The particles were then washed twice with a large excess of distilled water by decantation, filtered on coarse sintered-glass funel, air dried, and heated at 1500C for two hours in a circulating air bath. The final material was dry-sieved with stainless screens to obtain a < 38ym fraction of 45 g.
Surface areas on the products obtained during the synthetic steps were obtained by the nitrogen flow method with the following results: Sample Surface Area, m2/g Starting Zipax 0.89, 0.99 First treatment with LudoxX AS 2.03, 2.09 Second treatment with Ludox AS 2.35, 2.46 Third treatment with LudoxO AS 3.07, 3.01 Fourth treatment with Ludo) AS 3.38, 3.50 Sintered at 6500C for two hours 2.67, 2.67 Final rehydrated material 2.85, 2.86 A mercury porosimetry measurement of this sample showed three breaks in the mercury intrusion plot, one at about 10 microns, representing the intrusion of mercury between the individual particles, a break at about 0.07y (700A) representing the macropores between the sol microparticles in the crust of the inital Zipax(E) structure, and a break at about 0.0068 (60A) representing the pores between the 140A sol ultramicroparticles which are multilayered onto the original Zipax6 structure by the procedure herein described. The volumes associated with the bimodal poresize distribution were: Macropores-(700A pores)--0.011 cc/g Micropores-(60A pores)--0.014 cc/g.
These data show that the final particles contained the desired bimodal pore configuration, with pores approximately one decade in size difference, and approximately equal pore volumes for each pore size.
EXAMPLE II Particles of the type illustrated in Figure 6 can be prepared as follows: 15 g of porous silica microspheres (PSM-40; 47 angstrom pores) made according to U.S.
Patent 3,782,075, January 1, 1974, Joseph J. Kirkland, assigned to Du Pont; U.S.
Patent 3,855,172, December 17, 1974, Ralph K. Iler and Herbert J. McQueston, assigned to E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co., was treated with 200 ml of 0.001 M ammonium hydroxide, allowed to stand for 10 minutes with occasional stirring and centrifuged in a 250 ml polyethylene bottle for two minutes (from the start) at approximately 2,000 revolutions/min. The clear supernatant was decanted, and to the wet cake was added 100 ml of 0.5 / Zelec(H)
A second layer of 2000A silica sol was placed on the PSM particles using the technique described above, after first hydrolyzing the fired silica particles in 0.01 M hydrochloric acid overnight and eliminating the acid by washing with distilled water. The material was again treated with ZelecO DX, followed by 2000A sol (25 ml of "virgin" plus the recovered sol excess from the first treatment, in the manner described above. Inspection of this material by scanning electron microscopy showed the second coating was layered as desired. Very few spots were seen on the beads, and only a very small amount of particle bridging was noted.
A third, fourth, fifth, and sixth treatment of the beads were carried out in essentially the same manner as described above to build up the desired crust of 2000A silica sol particles on the particles. These treated beads were fired at 7500C for one hour and rehydrolyzed by dilute acid treatment as above. SEM inspection of the final beads showed good coverage, but it was not possible to observe the exact thickness of the desired superficially porous crust.
Mercury intrusion measurements plotted in Figure 8 show that the pore volume of the larger pores of these particles is about 40 ', of the total pore volume and the pore volume of the smaller pore volume is about 60 /o of the total. The log molecular weight versus retention volume calibration plot for a 25x0.62 cm i.d.
column of these particles is shown in Figure 10. Because of the difference in internal volumes associated with the two modes, there is some deviation from linearity.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS:- 1. A resolving zone for a chromatograph comprising a plurality of macroparticles, said macroparticles being chosen to provide said resolving zone with a bimodal pore size distribution (as hereinbefore defined), the average pore size for each mode being such that the linear portions of the molecular weight calibration curve for each pore size in the bimodal distribution are substantially nonoverlapping and the pore volume of each mode being such that said linear portions are substantially parallel.
2. The resolving zone of Claim I wherein the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having a smaller average pore size provides from 30 to 60% of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having a larger average pore size provides from 70 to 40 " of the total pore volume of the macropartices in the resolving zone.
3. The resolving zone of Claim 2 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides about 40 to 60 ,', of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone and wherein the average pore sizes of the components of the bimodal pore size distribution are about one order of magnitude apart.
4. The resolving zone of Claim 3 wherein the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the smaller average pore size provides about 40 to 55 ,', of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the larger average pore size provides about 45 to 60 " of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone.
5. The resolving zone of Claim 4 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides 45-55?;, of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone.
6. The resolving zone of Claim 4 wherein the macroparticles have an average diameter of 0.5 to 500 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having a diameter of 0.005 to 1.0 micron and wherein each macroparticle has a bimodal pore size distribution.
7. The resolving zone of Claim 4 wherein the macroparticles have an average diameter of 0.5 to 500 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having a diameter of 0.005 to 1.0 micron, the bimodal pore size distribution in the zone being provided by a plurality of macroparticles having an average pore size within one mode of the bimodal distribution and a plurality of macroparticles having an average pore size within the other mode of the bimodal distribution.
8. The resolving zone of Claim 6 wherein said macroparticles are totally porous macroparticles having an average diameter of 0.5 to 50 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having an average diameter of 0.005 to 0.5 micron.
9. The resolving zone of Claim 8 wherein the macroparticles are silica.
10. The resolving zone of Claim 6 wherein the macroparticles are superficially
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (43)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **. A second layer of 2000A silica sol was placed on the PSM particles using the technique described above, after first hydrolyzing the fired silica particles in 0.01 M hydrochloric acid overnight and eliminating the acid by washing with distilled water. The material was again treated with ZelecO DX, followed by 2000A sol (25 ml of "virgin" plus the recovered sol excess from the first treatment, in the manner described above. Inspection of this material by scanning electron microscopy showed the second coating was layered as desired. Very few spots were seen on the beads, and only a very small amount of particle bridging was noted. A third, fourth, fifth, and sixth treatment of the beads were carried out in essentially the same manner as described above to build up the desired crust of 2000A silica sol particles on the particles. These treated beads were fired at 7500C for one hour and rehydrolyzed by dilute acid treatment as above. SEM inspection of the final beads showed good coverage, but it was not possible to observe the exact thickness of the desired superficially porous crust. Mercury intrusion measurements plotted in Figure 8 show that the pore volume of the larger pores of these particles is about 40 ', of the total pore volume and the pore volume of the smaller pore volume is about 60 /o of the total. The log molecular weight versus retention volume calibration plot for a 25x0.62 cm i.d. column of these particles is shown in Figure 10. Because of the difference in internal volumes associated with the two modes, there is some deviation from linearity. WHAT WE CLAIM IS:-
1. A resolving zone for a chromatograph comprising a plurality of macroparticles, said macroparticles being chosen to provide said resolving zone with a bimodal pore size distribution (as hereinbefore defined), the average pore size for each mode being such that the linear portions of the molecular weight calibration curve for each pore size in the bimodal distribution are substantially nonoverlapping and the pore volume of each mode being such that said linear portions are substantially parallel.
2. The resolving zone of Claim I wherein the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having a smaller average pore size provides from 30 to 60% of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having a larger average pore size provides from 70 to 40 " of the total pore volume of the macropartices in the resolving zone.
3. The resolving zone of Claim 2 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides about 40 to 60 ,', of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone and wherein the average pore sizes of the components of the bimodal pore size distribution are about one order of magnitude apart.
4. The resolving zone of Claim 3 wherein the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the smaller average pore size provides about 40 to 55 ,', of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the larger average pore size provides about 45 to 60 " of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone.
5. The resolving zone of Claim 4 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides 45-55?;, of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone.
6. The resolving zone of Claim 4 wherein the macroparticles have an average diameter of 0.5 to 500 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having a diameter of 0.005 to 1.0 micron and wherein each macroparticle has a bimodal pore size distribution.
7. The resolving zone of Claim 4 wherein the macroparticles have an average diameter of 0.5 to 500 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having a diameter of 0.005 to 1.0 micron, the bimodal pore size distribution in the zone being provided by a plurality of macroparticles having an average pore size within one mode of the bimodal distribution and a plurality of macroparticles having an average pore size within the other mode of the bimodal distribution.
8. The resolving zone of Claim 6 wherein said macroparticles are totally porous macroparticles having an average diameter of 0.5 to 50 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having an average diameter of 0.005 to 0.5 micron.
9. The resolving zone of Claim 8 wherein the macroparticles are silica.
10. The resolving zone of Claim 6 wherein the macroparticles are superficially
porours having an average diameter of 5 to 50 microns and are composed of a macrocore surrounded by microparticles having a diameter of 0.1 to 0.5 micron.
11. The resolving zone of Claim 10 wherein the macroparticles are composed primarily of silica.
12. The resolving zone of Claim 7 wherein the macroparticles are totally porous macroparticles having an average diameter of 0.5 to 50 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having an average diameter of 0.005 to 0.5 micron.
13. The resolving zone of Claim 12 wherein the macroparticles are silica.
14. The resolving zone of Claim 7 wherein the macroparticles are superficially porous having an average diameter of 5 to 50 microns and are composed of a macrocore surrounded by microparticles having a diameter of 0. I to 0.5 micron.
15. The resolving zone of Claim 14 wherein the macroparticles are composed primarily of silica.
16. A process for chromatographic-separation comprising the steps (a) placing the material to be separated in a carrier fluid; (b) contacting the carrier fluid with a resolving zone; and (c) determining the extent of retention of said material in the zone, comprising using a resolving zone comprising a plurality of macroparticles, said macroparticles being chosen to provide said resolving zone with a bimodal pore size distribution as hereinbefore defined, the average pore size for each mode being such that the linear portions of the molecular weight calibration curve for each pore size in the bimodal distribution are substantially nonoverlapping and the pore volume of each mode being such that said linear portions are substantially parallel.
17. The process of Claim 16 wherein the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having a smaller average pore size provides from 30 to 60 / u of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having a larger average pore size provides from 70 to 40 /n of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone.
18. The process of Claim 17 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides 40 to 60% of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone and wherein the average pore sizes of the components of the bimodal pore distribution are about one order of magnitude apart.
19. The process of Claim 18 wherein the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the smaller average pore size provides 40 to 55 /n of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the larger avarage pore size provides 45 to 60% of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone.
20. The process of Claim 19 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides 4555% of the total pore volume of the macroparticles in the resolving zone.
21. The process of Claim 19 wherein the macroparticles have an average diameter of 0.5 to 500 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having a diameter of 0.005 to 1.0 micron and wherein each macroparticle has a bimodal pore size distribution.
22. The process of Claim 19 wherein the macroparticles have an average diameter of 0.5 to 500 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having a diameter of 0.005 to 1.0 micron, the bimodal pore size distribution in the zone being provided by a plurality of macroparticles having an average pore size within one mode of the bimodal distribution and a plurality of macroparticles having an average pore size within the other mode of the bimodal distribution.
23. The process of Claim 21 wherein said macroparticles are totally porous macroparticles having an average diameter of 0.5 to 50 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having an average diameter of 0.005 to 0.5 micron.
24. The process of Claim 21 wherein the macroparticles are superficially porous having an average diameter of 5 to 50 microns and are composed of a macrocore surrounded by microparticles having a diameter of 0.1 to 0.5 micron.
25. The process of Claim 22 wherein the macroparticles are totally porous macroparticles having an average diameter of 0.5 to 50 microns and are composed of a plurality of microparticles having an average diameter of 0.005 to 0.5 micron.
26. The process of Claim 22 wherein the macroparticles are superficially porous having an average diameter of 5 to 50 microns and are composed of a macrocore surrounded by microparticles having a diameter of 0.1 to 0.5 micron.
27. A powder for chromatographic separations when used in a resolving zone as defined in claim 1, the said powder consisting essentially of a plurality of discrete porous macroparticles, each macroparticle having an average diameter of about 0.5 to about 500 microns and a bimodal pore size distribution, the average pore sizes of the components of the bimodal distribution being about one order of magnitude apart and the component of the bimodal distribution having the smaller average pore size provides from 30 to 600" of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal distribution having the larger average pore size provides from 70 to 400/,, of the total pore volume.
28. The powder of Claim 27 wherein the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the smaller average pore size provides 40 to 55 ji" of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the larger average pore size provides from 60 to 450,,', of the total pore volume.
29. The powder of Claim 28 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides from 45 to 55% of the total pore volume.
30. The powder of Claim 27 wherein said macroparticles are superficially porous macroparticles having an impervious core and a coating of a multiplicity of like monolayers of colloidal microparticles joined to and surrounding the core, the microparticles having a diameter of 0.005 to 1.0 micron and comprising from 0.2 to 25'ji" of the total volume of the macroparticle.
31. The powder of Claim 30 wherein the microparticles have a diameter of 0.1 to 0.5 micron and the macroparticles have diameter of 5 to 50 microns.
32. The powder of Claim 31 wherein the macroparticles are composed principally of silica and wherein the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the smaller average pore size provides 40 to 55"', of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the larger average pore size provides 60 to 45 ", of the total pore volume.
33. The powder of Claim 32 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides 45 to 55% of the total pore volume.
34. A powder of Claim 27 wherein said macroparticles are totally porous each being composed of a plurality of microparticles, the microparticles having a diameter of 0.005 to 1.0 micron.
35. A powder of Claim 33 wherein the macroparticles have a diameter of from 5 to 50 microns and the microparticles have a diameter of 0.005 to 0.5 micron.
36. The powder of Claim 35 wherein the macroparticles are composed principally of silica and wherein the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the smaller average pore size provides 40 to 55%, of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal pore size distribution having the larger average pore size provides 60 to 45, of the total pore volume.
37. The powder of Claim 36 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides 45 to 55% of the total pore volume.
38. The powder of Claim 27 wherein the macroparticles are totally porous having a core of a plurality of ultramicroparticles 1 to 30 nanometers in diameter and a skin of a plurality of microparticles 0.1 to 1.0 micron in diameter.
39. The powder of Claim 38 wherein the macroparticles are 5 to 50 microns in diameter and the microparticles are 0.1 to 0.5 micron in diameter.
40. The powder of Claim 39 wherein the macroparticles are silica and wherein the component of the bimodal distribution having the smaller average pore size provides 40 to 55 ," of the total pore volume and the component of the bimodal distribution having the larger pore size provides 60 to 45 of the total pore volume.
41. The powder of Claim 40 wherein each component of the bimodal pore size distribution provides 45 to 55', of the total pore volume.
42. A powder for chromatographic separation as claimed in claim 27 substantially as hereinbefore described.
43. A process for chromatographic separation as claimed in claim 16 sub tantially as described in the foregoing Examples.
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GB2506165A (en) * 2012-09-24 2014-03-26 Thermo Electron Mfg Ltd Chromatography column
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GB2506165A (en) * 2012-09-24 2014-03-26 Thermo Electron Mfg Ltd Chromatography column
GB2506166A (en) * 2012-09-24 2014-03-26 Thermo Electron Mfg Ltd Chromatography column
GB2506166B (en) * 2012-09-24 2014-12-17 Thermo Electron Mfg Ltd Improvements in and relating to chromatography columns
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