Chromatographic Methods (e-bog) af Rice, C. B. F.
Rice, C. B. F. (forfatter)

Chromatographic Methods e-bog

436,85 DKK (inkl. moms 546,06 DKK)
Classification of chromatographic methods Chromatography is the name given to a particular family of separation techniques of great effectiveness. The original method was described in 1903 by Tswett, who used it for the separation of coloured substances, and the name chromatog- raphy stems from this. However, the limitation to coloured compounds never really obtained, and most chromatographic s...
E-bog 436,85 DKK
Forfattere Rice, C. B. F. (forfatter)
Forlag Springer
Udgivet 11 november 2013
Genrer Analytical chemistry
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781489933607
Classification of chromatographic methods Chromatography is the name given to a particular family of separation techniques of great effectiveness. The original method was described in 1903 by Tswett, who used it for the separation of coloured substances, and the name chromatog- raphy stems from this. However, the limitation to coloured compounds never really obtained, and most chromatographic separations are nowadays performed on mixtures of colourless substances, including gases. Like fractional distillation, chromatography relies on the relative movement of two phases, but in chromatography one is fixed and is known as the stationary phase; the other is known as the mobile phase. Chromatographic methods may be classified first according to the nature of the mobile phase and, second, according to the nature of the stationary phase. The mobile phase may be a liquid or a gas, and the stationary phase may be a solid or a liquid. There are thus four main sub-divisions of the chromatographic process, as set out in Table 1.1. The system is called adsorption chromatography if the stationary phase is a solid, and partition chromatography if it is a liquid.