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Published October 24, 2013 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Teflon-HPLC: A novel chromatographic system for application to isotope geochemistry and other industries

Abstract

Traditional column chromatography techniques are restricted by several factors, including limitations on column length, resin grain size, elution time, and a general inability to slowly ramp up or down reagent concentrations along a gradient. Likewise, most existing high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) systems are not amenable to certain column chromatography techniques that require highly concentrated acids. Here, we outline the development of a Teflon HPLC (T-HPLC) system for application to a wide variety of chromatography problems. The primary factors that set the T-HPLC system apart from any currently available chromatography procedure are the following: 1) a fluid flow path enclosed entirely by Teflon, 2) fully automated elution schemes controlled by computer software, which allows for fresh mixing of reagents for each elution step, and fine scale gradient/ramp elutions, 3) temperature control of the entire system (up to 80 °C) for enhanced chemical separations and, 4) a modular design making the system easily adaptable to a variety of separation schemes. The effectiveness of the T-HPLC system is tested on two column techniques that are of particular interest to the geochemistry/cosmochemistry communities. The first application involves the separation of Ni from Mg, which is required for high precision Ni isotopic studies and for investigating the abundance of the extinct ^(60)Fe radionuclide. The T-HPLC system greatly simplifies and improves upon the classical technique. In a single pass on an 80 cm long column, we achieve excellent separation of Ni from Mg, with a much improved time frame (10 h versus 70 h). The second application is the separation of the individual rare earth elements from each other. The isotopic compositions of the multi-isotopic REEs (La, Ce, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Dy, Er, Yb and Lu) may hold important information about nucleosynthetic processes, cosmic-ray exposure effects in meteorites and airless bodies, and mass fractionation effects. For this application, we also developed a computer simulation that uses experimentally determined partition coefficients to simulate an elution curve in order to optimize the actual column elution scheme. Overall, we were able to achieve excellent separation of the multi-isotopic REEs from each other. Although the two applications that we explore are in the fields of geochemistry/cosmochemistry, the modular design and adaptability make the T-HPLC system useful to a wide array of scientific fields and industries.

Additional Information

© 2013 Elsevier. Received 7 February 2013, Revised 1 August 2013, Accepted 4 August 2013, Available online 16 August 2013. Editor: L. Reisberg. The authors would like to thank Kevin Lynch and Richard Dojutrek of the University of Illinois at Chicago, as well as Helmut Krebs of the University of Chicago for their help and guidance with anything machine shop related. Marc-Alban Millet is also thanked for his help with the REE elution. This work greatly benefited from thorough reviews by T. Meisel and an anonymous reviewer, as well as from editorial remarks by L. Reisberg. This work was supported by NASA grant NNX12AH60G and by a fellowship from the Packard Foundation to N.D. Some of the features of this system are described in a U.S. Provisional Patent Application (No. 61843509).

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August 22, 2023
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