Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In chemical analysis, capillary electrochromatography (CEC) is a chromatographic technique in which the mobile phase is driven through the chromatographic bed by electro-osmosis. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Capillary electrochromatography is a combination of two analytical techniques, high-performance liquid chromatography and capillary electrophoresis .
Capillary electrochromatography (CEC) is an electrochromatography technique in which the liquid mobile phase is driven through a capillary containing the chromatographic stationary phase by electroosmosis. [3] [4] It is a combination of high-performance liquid chromatography and capillary electrophoresis. The capillaries is packed with HPLC ...
Capillary electrophoresis (CE) is a family of electrokinetic separation methods performed in submillimeter diameter capillaries and in micro- and nanofluidic channels.Very often, CE refers to capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE), but other electrophoretic techniques including capillary gel electrophoresis (CGE), capillary isoelectric focusing (CIEF), capillary isotachophoresis and micellar ...
Capillary electrochromatography; Capillary electrophoresis; Centrifugal partition chromatography; Chiral analysis; Chiral column chromatography; Chiral thin-layer ...
C. Canadian Centre for Alternatives to Animal Methods; Cannula transfer; Capillary electrochromatography; Carbol fuchsin; Carnoy's solution; Cathepsin zymography
The original interface between capillary zone electrophoresis and mass spectrometry was developed in 1987 [9] by Richard D. Smith and coworkers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, and who also later were involved in development of interfaces with other CE variants, including capillary isotachophoresis and capillary isoelectric focusing.
Capillary inner diameter is well defined but film thickness reduces by bleed and thermal breakdown that occur after column heating over time, depending on chemical bonding to the silica glass wall and polymer cross-linking of the stationary phase.
Two well resolved peaks in a chromatogram. The plate height given as: = with the column length and the number of theoretical plates can be estimated from a chromatogram by analysis of the retention time for each component and its standard deviation as a measure for peak width, provided that the elution curve represents a Gaussian curve.