Fourier transform near-infrared (FT-NIR) diffuse reflection spectroscopy was used in combination with principal component analysis and partial least-squares regression to simultaneously determine the physical and the chemical parameters of a porous poly(p-methylstyrene-co-1,2-bis(p-vinylphenyl)ethane) (MS/BVPE) monolithic polymer. Chemical variations during the synthesis of the polymer material can alter the pore volume and pore area distributions within the polymer scaffold. Furthermore, mid-infrared and near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopic chemical imaging was implemented as a tool to assess the uniformity of the samples. The presented study summarizes the comparative results derived from the spectral FT-NIR data combined with chemometric techniques. The relevance of the interrelation of physical and chemical parameters is highlighted whereas the amount of MS/BVPE (%, v/v) and the quantity (%) of micropores (diameter, d < 6 nm), mesopores (6 nm < d < 50 nm), and macropores (50 nm < d < 200 nm) could be determined with one measurement. For comparison of the quantitative data, the standard error of prediction (SEP) was used. The SEP for determining the MS/BVPE amount in the samples showed 0.35%, for pore volume quantiles 1.42-8.44%, and for pore area quantiles 0.38-1.45%, respectively. The implication of these results is that FT-NIR spectroscopy is a suitable technique for the screening of samples with varying physicochemical properties and to quantitatively determine the parameters simultaneously within a few seconds.
Monolithic poly(1,2-bis(p-vinylphenyl)ethane (BVPE)) capillary columns were prepared by thermally initiated free radical polymerisation of 1,2-bis(p-vinylphenyl)ethane in the presence of inert diluents (porogens) and alpha,alpha'-azoisobutyronitrile (AIBN) as initiator. Polymerisations were accomplished in 200 microm ID fused silica capillaries at 65 degrees C and for 60 min. Mercury intrusion porosimetry measurements of the polymeric RP support showed a broad bimodal pore-size-distribution of mesopores and small macropores in the range of 5-400 nm and flow-channels in the mum range. N(2)-adsorption (BET) analysis resulted in a tremendous enhancement of surface area (101 m(2)/g) of BVPE stationary phases compared to typical organic monoliths (approximately 20 m(2)/g), indicating the presence of a considerable amount of mesopores. Consequently, the adequate proportion of both meso- and (small) macropores allowed the rapid and high-resolution separation of low-molecular-weight compounds as well as biomolecules on the same monolithic support. At the same time, the high fraction of flow-channels provided enhanced column permeability. The chromatographic performance of poly(1,2-bis(p-vinylphenyl)ethane) capillary columns for the separation of biomolecules (proteins, oligonucleotides) and small molecules (alkyl benzenes, phenols, phenons) are demonstrated in this article. Additionally, pressure drop versus flow rate measurements of novel poly(1,2-bis(p-vinylphenyl)ethane) capillary columns confirmed high mechanical robustness, low swelling in organic solvents and high permeability. Due to the simplicity of monolith fabrication, comprehensive studies of the retention and separation behaviour of monolithic BVPE columns resulted in high run-to-run and batch-to-batch reproducibilities. All these attributes prove the excellent applicability of monolithic poly(1,2-bis(p-vinylphenyl)ethane) capillary columns for micro-HPLC towards a huge range of analytes of different chemistries and molecular sizes.
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