HPLC can separate mixtures by using four types of chromatography: partition separates based on how compounds partition between a mobile and stationary phase; adsorption uses a solid stationary phase to retain compounds; ion exchange separates ions based on their charge; and size exclusion separates based on molecular size as larger molecules pass through quicker than smaller ones.
HPLC can separate mixtures by using four types of chromatography: partition separates based on how compounds partition between a mobile and stationary phase; adsorption uses a solid stationary phase to retain compounds; ion exchange separates ions based on their charge; and size exclusion separates based on molecular size as larger molecules pass through quicker than smaller ones.
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HPLC can separate mixtures by using four types of chromatography: partition separates based on how compounds partition between a mobile and stationary phase; adsorption uses a solid stationary phase to retain compounds; ion exchange separates ions based on their charge; and size exclusion separates based on molecular size as larger molecules pass through quicker than smaller ones.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as TXT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd