Talanta 45 (1998) 1189–1199
Bonded stationary phases for reversed phase liquid
chromatography with a water mobile phase: application to
subcritical water extraction
Toby E. Young
a
, Scott T. Ecker
a
, Robert E. Synovec
a,
*, Nathan T. Hawley
b
,
Jonathan P. Lomber
b
, Chien M. Wai
b
a
Department of Chemistry, Box 351700, Uniersity of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 -1700, USA
b
Department of Chemistry, Renfrew Hall, Uniersity of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844 -2343, USA
Received 14 May 1997; accepted 17 July 1997
Abstract
Reversed phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) is demonstrated for hydrophobic analytes
such as aromatic hydrocarbons on a chemically bonded stationary phase and a mobile phase consisting of only water.
Reversed phase liquid chromatography separations using a water-only mobile phase has been termed WRP-LC for
water-only reversed phase LC. Reasonable capacity factors are achieved through the use of a non-porous silica
substrate resulting in a chromatographic phase volume ratio much lower than usually found in RP-HPLC. Two types
of bonded WRP-LC columns have been developed and applied. A brush phase was synthesized from an
organochlorosilane. The other phase, synthesized from an organodichlorosilane, is termed a branch phase and results
in a polymeric structure of greater thickness than the brush phase. A baseline separation of a mixture containing
benzaldehyde, benzene, toluene, and ethyl benzene in less than 5 min is demonstrated using a water mobile phase with
12 000 plates generated for the unretained benzaldehyde peak. The theoretically predicted minimum reduced plate
height is also shown to be approached for the unretained analyte using the brush phase. As an application, subcritical
water extraction (SWE) at 200°C is combined with WRP-LC. This combination allows for the extraction of organic
compounds from solid matrices immediately followed by liquid chromatographic separation of those extracted
compounds all using a solvent of 100% water. We demonstrate SWE/WRP-LC by spiking benzene, ethyl benzene,
and naphthalene onto sand then extracting the analytes with SWE followed by chromatographic separation on a
WRP column. A sand sample contaminated with gasoline was also analyzed using SWE/WRP-LC. This extraction
process also provides kinetic information about the rate of analyte extraction from the sand matrix. Under the
conditions employed, analytes were extracted at different rates, providing additional selectivity in addition to the
WRP-LC separation. © 1998 Elsevier Science S.A.
Keywords: Reverse phase liquid chromatography; Water mobile phase; Subcritical water extraction
* Corresponding author. Fax: +1 206 6858665; e-mail: synovec@gibbs.chem.washington.edu
0039-9140/98/$19.00 © 1998 Elsevier Science S.A. All rights reserved.
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