Sugar Analysis |
SeQuant® ZIC®-HILIC HPLC columns are suitable for the analysis of sugars, sugar alcohols and other carbohydrates in many different type of samples. By using higher pH and higher temperatures the speed of mutarotation can be increased to avoid peak-splitting for reducing sugars.
When using a bonded zwitterionic HILIC stationary phase, the elution of polar compounds under high percentage organic mobile phase conditions results in maximum analyte sensitivity and superior ionization. SeQuant® ZIC®-HILIC stationary phases are available with either a silica or a polymer core base particle. The latter offers higher pH stability, thus it is an advantage for carbohydrate analysis, as many analytes of interest are pH dependent. Using a silica core particle, the working pH range is typically 3-8, while polymeric material tolerates both more acidic and basic conditions.
The use of a basic buffer component, like ammonium hydroxide, in the mobile phase aids separation and enables controlled elution of anomers of reducing sugars. This is illustrated with simple carbohydrates separated under both neutral conditions and at an elevated pH using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) detection. The figure below demonstrates how two of the model compounds, fructose and sucrose, are easily separated at any pH using a SeQuant® ZIC®-HILIC column.
Learn MoreWhen separating reducing sugars, such as glucose and lactose, mutarotation at neutral pH occurs slowly, resulting in peak splitting and potential elution as isomeric pairs. In contrast, a polymer based SeQuant® ZIC®-pHILIC column with higher pH tolerance, combined with a basic buffer component, ammonium hydroxide, in the mobile phase results in the collapse of glucose and lactose anomers. This aids both separation and detection. As seen in the figure, high pH conditions allow fast mutarotation between the isomeric forms of glucose and lactose. This results in a single, although broadened, peak width. All four sugars are easily baseline separated in less than 4 minutes.
Learn MoreTo sharpen the peak width for all model compounds, gradient elution was explored. However, an obstacle with gradient elution is that column pressure changes with time as the mobile phase composition alters. To overcome this, column temperature should be increased, and the viscosity contribution of the changing mobile phase composition should be reduced. At 55°C, the speed of mutarotation was increased, thereby collapsing peak width during separation. As seen in the figure, high temperature combined with high pH conditions during gradient elution using a SeQuant® ZIC®-pHILIC column resulted in optimum baseline separation of all four analytes within 3 minutes.
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